The pricing is competitive but on the higher side of the pricing scale. It depends on the project's budget. For very large enterprise-level projects, DataStage is still a good choice.
The pricing depends on the setup. However, we paid $100,000 as a one-time cost for an on-premises setup. You do have extra costs when using the product on-premises. For example, you need to have servers to host it.
I have no information on the exact pricing for IBM InfoSphere DataStage because the solution is usually procured by the clients my company works with, though the pricing is higher compared to other solutions, so many clients choose to go with a different solution rather than IBM InfoSphere DataStage.
It is very difficult to say how much the product costs because there are variables depending on the configuration. Normally it's priced according to use, so the price can vary quite a lot. The more you use, the more you pay. In comparison to other products, I would say it's not so expensive as Informatica, but it is intended to be an enterprise solution so it's not very cheap to deploy as products that are not enterprise solutions. The products we offer are really very different in pricing compared to open-source products. With open-source you have only the maintenance cost. For the software products we use, you have to invest in the software and then the maintenance costs are in addition to that. There are no other costs in addition to the standard licensing fee and the maintenance. With IBM, you typically pay for the licenses and the first 12 months of maintenance is included in that cost. Afterward, you pay for the maintenance year-to-year.
IBM InfoSphere DataStage is a high-quality data integration tool that aims to design, develop, and run jobs that move and transform data for organizations of different sizes. The product works by integrating data across multiple systems through a high-performance parallel framework. It supports extended metadata management, enterprise connectivity, and integration of all types of data.
The solution is the data integration component of IBM InfoSphere Information Server, providing a graphical...
I do not have access to the pricing or standard licensing fee information.
The pricing is competitive but on the higher side of the pricing scale. It depends on the project's budget. For very large enterprise-level projects, DataStage is still a good choice.
DataStage’s cost is one-third of that of Informatica. The solution is cheap. Any client would opt for it.
Pricing is handled by the procurement department. But compared to other enterprise tools like Informatica or Pentaho, IBM DataStage is quite cheaper.
The product is expensive. I rate its pricing a ten out of ten.
The price of the product is reasonable, especially for mid-sized companies. We have been successfully selling to several mid-sized companies.
The company has a contract with IBM. I'm not sure of the exact pricing.
The pricing depends on the setup. However, we paid $100,000 as a one-time cost for an on-premises setup. You do have extra costs when using the product on-premises. For example, you need to have servers to host it.
The licensing we have is permanent.
I have no information on the exact pricing for IBM InfoSphere DataStage because the solution is usually procured by the clients my company works with, though the pricing is higher compared to other solutions, so many clients choose to go with a different solution rather than IBM InfoSphere DataStage.
Comparable solutions will have common disadvantages, which is the total cost of the project. It's quite expensive.
We pay an annual licensing fee.
The price is expensive but there are no licensing fees.
It's very expensive.
The solution is quite expensive in comparison to similar solutions.
There were no problems with the licensing model for the bank.
It is very difficult to say how much the product costs because there are variables depending on the configuration. Normally it's priced according to use, so the price can vary quite a lot. The more you use, the more you pay. In comparison to other products, I would say it's not so expensive as Informatica, but it is intended to be an enterprise solution so it's not very cheap to deploy as products that are not enterprise solutions. The products we offer are really very different in pricing compared to open-source products. With open-source you have only the maintenance cost. For the software products we use, you have to invest in the software and then the maintenance costs are in addition to that. There are no other costs in addition to the standard licensing fee and the maintenance. With IBM, you typically pay for the licenses and the first 12 months of maintenance is included in that cost. Afterward, you pay for the maintenance year-to-year.
Small and medium-sized companies cannot afford to pay for this solution.