

- #Office 365 costs install#
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- #Office 365 costs license#
The top end of his range translates into $48 annually - $240 total or $48 per license, over five years - and produces a $9.60 per license per year fee. Ullman's estimate of $2 to $4 per month for Home Office straddles the cost of a perpetual license. Thus a copy of Office Home & Student 2010 would run $125 total, or $41.66 for each of the three provided copies, over the same five-year stretch. In comparison, Office Home & Student 2010, which provides three perpetual licenses, lists for $149.99 and is commonly discounted at retail. That comes out to $14.40 per license per year. Using that timespan, the numbers are straight forward.Īt $72 annually, a consumer subscribing to Office 365 Home Premium would pay $360 total, or $72 for each of the five allowed copies, over a five-year period. Several of the analysts noted that the average user runs a version of Office for about five years before upgrading.
#Office 365 costs install#
That would cost consumers $72 annually - although Microsoft could offer both monthly and yearly prices, discounting the latter - for the right to install Office 2013 on up to five PCs, Macs and tablets.īut consumers aren't stupid, said Moorhead: They'll do the math. So if there was a consensus among the four analysts, it was the expectation that Home Premium's monthly fee will come in under $6. His other yardstick? The current Office 365 P1 plan, which runs for $6 per month. Helm noted the obvious, that Microsoft failed three years ago at a price point less than $6 a month. Microsoft pulled the Equipt plug in April 2009, just nine months after launching the offer. Customers were allowed to install Equipt, and thus Office 2007, on as many as three PCs for that fee. Microsoft priced an annual Equipt subscription at $69.99, or about $5.83 per month. That stab was Equipt, a subscription bundle of Office Home and Student 2007, its now-defunct OneCare antivirus product, and several then-for-free online services, including Hotmail. Rob Helm, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft, declined to put a price on the table, but said one of the benchmarks he'll use when he analyzes Office 365 will be an earlier attempt by Microsoft to get consumers to rent the suite. Ullman is a former Microsoft licensing manager in the company's Enterprise & Partner Group, and is the author of Negotiating with Microsoft. "My guess is $2-$4 per month, but with less functionality then the Small Business Premium.
#Office 365 costs software#
"I expect most of the plans to stay at current prices, and to see Home Premium coming in below the $6 tag," said Daryl Ullman, the co-founder and managing director of the Emerset Consulting Group, which specializes in helping companies negotiate software licensing deals. Some experts were convinced that Microsoft will be very aggressive, and will peg Home Premium's price even lower than P1's. At the bottom of the scale, the "P1" program, while only $6 per user per month, offers the cloud-based Office Web apps for Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint and Word, not Office on the desktop. Only the highest priced "E3" and "E4" plans provide five installs of Office 2010 on the desktop, but their $20 and $22 per user per month fees were quickly discounted by the experts as unreasonable for Office 365 Home Premium.

But today's Office 365 programs include services unsuitable to consumers, and most do not give users the right to install Office on their computers. In fact, that's one of the most intriguing concepts to come out of the Office 2013 preview announcement. Unlike the current Office 365 plans, the new ones will target consumers, too. Others relied on Microsoft's Office 365 subscription plans, even though the comparisons were apples-to-oranges.
#Office 365 costs android#
"For those businesses and users not married to Office, Google's offering can be very, very compelling, particularly to users with Android phones and those who grew up on Web tools." "They need to be competitive with Google Apps for Business," said Moorhead in an email reply to questions Thursday. Patrick Moorhead, principal analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, agreed. So Microsoft's has to be comparable to that. "They're competing directly with Google Apps," said Osterman. In lieu of direct comparisons, they used what yardsticks were at hand: Google Apps' pricing and that of the current Office 365 crop, which target only businesses.
