Global Automation Lead - Customer Operations at a energy/utilities company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 10
2024-02-29T10:06:51Z
Feb 29, 2024
It is very cheap. I would rate the pricing a three out of ten, with ten being expensive. You just have to pay for your own people to analyze the output from the tool.
Compared to its competitors, Kryon RPA's pricing is very competitive. We've priced Kryon RPA based on the use cases that we're getting and the return on investment. Its list price is one dollar, but we got it for 30 cents because the pricing was negotiated. Along with licensing, we paid Amazon to set up the Amazon infrastructure to support the software. We also got the whole environment certified as an ISO-certified environment. Additionally, there are resourcing costs because we set up a fully managed service proposition around it. We had to pay about 30% additional cost in addition to the standard licensing fees while using the solution. I rate Kryon RPA a four out of ten for pricing.
Director of Process Engineering at a healthcare company with 5,001-10,000 employees
Real User
2019-11-07T10:35:00Z
Nov 7, 2019
The cost is fairly similar to its competitors' costs. It might have been a little bit more reasonable than the others, and that cost was with Process Discovery in addition. There were no other licensing costs, but there are our hosting costs and our own AWS cost.
Business Analyst at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2019-10-30T06:14:00Z
Oct 30, 2019
The OCR reader, to help read non-digital PDFs, has a separate charge. We don't have that plugin. The only other cost that I know was separate, at the time, is the Process Discovery. I don't know if that's included in a bundle now.
Manager, Application Support at a retailer with 5,001-10,000 employees
Real User
2019-07-30T10:41:00Z
Jul 30, 2019
They license per robot and we have 25 robots. You get so many robot licenses and can allocate those licenses to either attended, unintended, or Process Discovery bots. If you have 25 licenses, for example, you could have 20 automation bots and five process discovery. This allocation is flexible. There are also maintenance costs.
There are different pricing levels for every bot or unattended bot. You can buy however many you want. You'll need an additional virtual machine for it to work on. You can get multiple attended bots if you have users who have Windows machines. You can run those locally on their machines.
Our licensing cost is close to $80,000 US per year and that includes the server, Studio, and both attended and unattended bots. There are no costs in addition to the standard licensing fees.
Using Nintex RPA, enterprises can leverage trained bots to quickly and cost-effectively automate routine tasks without the use of code in an easy-to-use drag and drop interface. Users are now equipped with a comprehensive, enterprise-grade process management and automation solution that streamlines processes fueled by both structured and unstructured data sources.
It is very cheap. I would rate the pricing a three out of ten, with ten being expensive. You just have to pay for your own people to analyze the output from the tool.
Compared to its competitors, Kryon RPA's pricing is very competitive. We've priced Kryon RPA based on the use cases that we're getting and the return on investment. Its list price is one dollar, but we got it for 30 cents because the pricing was negotiated. Along with licensing, we paid Amazon to set up the Amazon infrastructure to support the software. We also got the whole environment certified as an ISO-certified environment. Additionally, there are resourcing costs because we set up a fully managed service proposition around it. We had to pay about 30% additional cost in addition to the standard licensing fees while using the solution. I rate Kryon RPA a four out of ten for pricing.
The price is affordable. The license is based on the number of bots and users.
Kryon is slightly more expensive compared to UiPath.
The cost is fairly similar to its competitors' costs. It might have been a little bit more reasonable than the others, and that cost was with Process Discovery in addition. There were no other licensing costs, but there are our hosting costs and our own AWS cost.
The OCR reader, to help read non-digital PDFs, has a separate charge. We don't have that plugin. The only other cost that I know was separate, at the time, is the Process Discovery. I don't know if that's included in a bundle now.
Our workforce management (WFM) team is managing the licensing costs.
They license per robot and we have 25 robots. You get so many robot licenses and can allocate those licenses to either attended, unintended, or Process Discovery bots. If you have 25 licenses, for example, you could have 20 automation bots and five process discovery. This allocation is flexible. There are also maintenance costs.
I am not involved in any of those.
The first robot was very expensive. For us, there are the additional implementation costs that we paying to HMS.
Licensing costs are about $100,000 a year without any additional costs.
In addition to the standard licensing costs, there are manpower costs.
There are different pricing levels for every bot or unattended bot. You can buy however many you want. You'll need an additional virtual machine for it to work on. You can get multiple attended bots if you have users who have Windows machines. You can run those locally on their machines.
Our licensing cost is close to $80,000 US per year and that includes the server, Studio, and both attended and unattended bots. There are no costs in addition to the standard licensing fees.
We have a yearly subscription.
For an unattended robot it's $6000 a month. Right now we have three unattended robots.
We have a yearly license. It's about $5,000 per year. There are no additional costs other than that a server has a license.
Setup is quite simple and not very expensive, but regarding licensing, I don't know.