Jamf Connect has a yearly licensing cost, which is expensive. You have to pay the deployment charges separately, and you have to pay premium support costs if you take it.
It's relatively inexpensive. However, there aren't many other players in this specific space offering what Jamf Connect does. There's an open-source product called NoMAD that was acquired by Jamf, which they rebranded and repackaged as Jamf Connect. Of course, free is great, but NoMAD only provided active directory integration and IDP integration. There are a few plugins available, like Microsoft's login plugin and Apple's deprecated login plugin from a few years ago, which essentially have similar functionality as the modern macOS. All of those other options were free, but they didn't offer the same breadth of capabilities as Jamf Connect. Additionally, you would still need to pay for the other aspects of those provider services. For example, Microsoft bundled it with other services for users of Azure Office 365. So, up until a few months ago, the Microsoft product was technically in beta and not fully supported for production environments due to potential support limitations. However, it has now been released as a non-beta product, providing full support.
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I am not involved in the pricing of anything in my current or customer's company.
It's definitely on the higher side for clients. I would consider it a high price. If it were lower, it would be an improvement.
Jamf Connect has a yearly licensing cost, which is expensive. You have to pay the deployment charges separately, and you have to pay premium support costs if you take it.
When compared to other solutions, the cost of Jamf Connect is low. I rate the cost as three out of ten, with ten being the highest.
It's relatively inexpensive. However, there aren't many other players in this specific space offering what Jamf Connect does. There's an open-source product called NoMAD that was acquired by Jamf, which they rebranded and repackaged as Jamf Connect. Of course, free is great, but NoMAD only provided active directory integration and IDP integration. There are a few plugins available, like Microsoft's login plugin and Apple's deprecated login plugin from a few years ago, which essentially have similar functionality as the modern macOS. All of those other options were free, but they didn't offer the same breadth of capabilities as Jamf Connect. Additionally, you would still need to pay for the other aspects of those provider services. For example, Microsoft bundled it with other services for users of Azure Office 365. So, up until a few months ago, the Microsoft product was technically in beta and not fully supported for production environments due to potential support limitations. However, it has now been released as a non-beta product, providing full support.