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Ask HN: Anyone using 'good guy' SaaS pricing?

6 pointsby chadkruseabout 11 years ago
Are you using it, and if not, why not?<p>By &#x27;good guy&#x27; SaaS pricing I&#x27;m referring to not charging for your monthly-billed service if the user hasn&#x27;t been active&#x2F;logged-in&#x2F;etc during the last billing cycle.<p>I just received an email from Slack saying they credited my account for a user that appeared &quot;inactive&quot; this month. Love that stuff. Great way to endear yourselves to your users.<p>If you&#x27;re against the practice, I&#x27;d love to hear why. And if you&#x27;re for the practice, let&#x27;s recognize some of the good actors that have implemented it. Unfortunately Slack is the only one I can think of at the moment (Sprintly used to, but no longer).

4 comments

noahcabout 11 years ago
If you sell to businesses, this is a horrible idea. I&#x27;d rather you charge me $150&#x2F;month and have no one use the service than have to explain to my boss, &quot;Why are we paying $110 this month, when it was $70 last month and two guys no longer work for us?&quot;<p>Also, customers are paying for the option to use your software at any time without signing up again. You&#x27;re providing some amount of value just in holding their data on your system. You shouldn&#x27;t avoid capturing that value.
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shortsightedsidabout 11 years ago
I don&#x27;t think it is a question of good guy or not, rather it&#x27;s about honoring the contract. The moment you sign up for something you are entering a contract to pay. It&#x27;s your obligation to do so. Now the other side can choose not to enforce that, but that doesn&#x27;t make them a &quot;good guy&quot;.<p>E.g. If you rented out an apartment but stayed at friend&#x27;s place for a month, then is the landlord going to skip asking for rent for that month? No. Does that make him a bad guy? No. It&#x27;s your responsibility to pay for rent. Same thing applies to car loans&#x2F;leases&#x2F;rentals, Newspaper subscriptions and Gym memberships. So, why should SaaS pricing be different? Granted an app can easily figure out if you haven&#x27;t used their system that month, but then so could a gym.
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palidanxabout 11 years ago
I had a situation where a client signed up for my companies&#x27;s saas service, then cancelled 2 days later without generating any of the artifacts they needed. When they cancelled, I didn&#x27;t get any complaints or messages from the client.<p>I followed up with a phone call, and learned that they had to use lab analysis and couldn&#x27;t use our service. I credited them the one month subscription they subscribed to since they didn&#x27;t use it. They appreciated the gesture, and hopefully they can generate some leads for their friends.
orky56about 11 years ago
While we&#x27;re on the general topic of &#x27;good guy&#x27; SaaS pricing, I thought I would bring up Asana. They charge MORE per head as your team gets larger. Their logic is that if you are a small team&#x2F;startup you are strapped for cash whereas if you are larger, you should be more able to afford it. Once again, another example of &#x27;good guy&#x27; pricing being more confusing and misrepresenting value.