Senior Director at a consultancy with 1-10 employees
Real User
2024-09-26T08:21:00Z
Sep 26, 2024
The pricing for Oracle Fusion is highly competitive but depends on the market. It is very suitable for large and middle-sized companies. For smaller companies, it might be a little expensive. For high-tech smaller companies, it is quite suitable and provides a good solution.
The solution's pricing is reasonable in the global market but not in Turkey, which is mainly due to the country's poor economic condition. I believe the vendor should provide some flexibility with the minimum number of licenses or general discounts for the Turkish market and mid-sized companies.
The price is average compared to other vendors. The licensing is on a yearly basis depending on the subscription pattern. There are no extra costs apart from licensing.
Co-Founder & Managing Director at a computer software company with 11-50 employees
Reseller
Top 10
2023-01-26T13:30:00Z
Jan 26, 2023
In a developing country such as Bangladesh, Oracle ERP Cloud is expensive compared to on-premise solutions, so the turnover is very low. Customers become more comfortable using on-premise services because of the high subscription costs of Oracle ERP Cloud. Very few customers here in Bangladesh use Oracle ERP Cloud. The product is very costly for customers in developing countries. However, it may not be that costly for customers in developed countries. My company pays for an annual subscription to Oracle ERP Cloud, and the contract is for two years, minimum. The contract includes all features and technical support. Rating the pricing for Oracle ERP Cloud would vary from customer to customer, but here in Bangladesh, it's the most expensive, so it's a one out of ten for being expensive. The headcount cost for each employee or executive in Bangladesh is low compared to other parts of the world. Suppose you're looking at deploying a cloud solution. In that case, people need to train more employees, so the cost of ownership is going to be high for on-premise applications, which would seem that it's better to go on the cloud, and this is what's happening in developed countries. People in developed countries are moving towards replacing on-premise applications with cloud solutions. However, that's not happening in Bangladesh or India because the human-resource cost is not so expensive, so a SaaS solution such as Oracle ERP Cloud isn't as popular. People here in Bangladesh do not have much interest in purchasing SaaS-based modules.
Senior Solution Architect at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2022-06-22T06:45:00Z
Jun 22, 2022
The pricing for Oracle ERP Cloud is on par with other top solutions. We are primarily a user-centric model of the transactional model in terms of what people do enter. This is centralized, so licensing costs for a user are not a concern in our case. We have a bundled five-year contract that includes technical support, and all features with no additional payment required.
IT Director at Guangdong Technion Institute of Technology
Real User
2021-05-14T12:59:07Z
May 14, 2021
The solution allows us to save on costs. It's less expensive than an on-prem version. We pay a yearly licensing fee. It's still relatively expensive. We'd like it to be cheaper still. Technical support runs on tiers. Better service requires an extra payment.
Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP offers a complete, innovative, and proven solution for organizations of all sizes. Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP is a comprehensive, modern solution on a single cloud platform that includes built-in industry standards and modern best practices.
Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP provides your teams with advanced capabilities, such as AI to automate the manual processes that slow them down, analytics to react to market shifts in real time, and automatic updates to stay current and...
Pricing is competitive, but a platter system similar to SAP's offerings would benefit customers more, allowing for flexible module implementation.
The pricing for Oracle Fusion is highly competitive but depends on the market. It is very suitable for large and middle-sized companies. For smaller companies, it might be a little expensive. For high-tech smaller companies, it is quite suitable and provides a good solution.
The product pricing is based on a per-user model. It is expensive.
The solution's pricing is reasonable in the global market but not in Turkey, which is mainly due to the country's poor economic condition. I believe the vendor should provide some flexibility with the minimum number of licenses or general discounts for the Turkish market and mid-sized companies.
I would rate the pricing a five out of ten.
I'm not aware of the Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP pricing details because I don't have information about it before deployment.
The solution is moderately priced, where it is neither expensive nor cheap.
Oracle ERP Cloud is not a cheap solution. I rate Oracle ERP Cloud a seven out of ten for its pricing.
The price is average compared to other vendors. The licensing is on a yearly basis depending on the subscription pattern. There are no extra costs apart from licensing.
We pay additional costs to a consulting company.
In a developing country such as Bangladesh, Oracle ERP Cloud is expensive compared to on-premise solutions, so the turnover is very low. Customers become more comfortable using on-premise services because of the high subscription costs of Oracle ERP Cloud. Very few customers here in Bangladesh use Oracle ERP Cloud. The product is very costly for customers in developing countries. However, it may not be that costly for customers in developed countries. My company pays for an annual subscription to Oracle ERP Cloud, and the contract is for two years, minimum. The contract includes all features and technical support. Rating the pricing for Oracle ERP Cloud would vary from customer to customer, but here in Bangladesh, it's the most expensive, so it's a one out of ten for being expensive. The headcount cost for each employee or executive in Bangladesh is low compared to other parts of the world. Suppose you're looking at deploying a cloud solution. In that case, people need to train more employees, so the cost of ownership is going to be high for on-premise applications, which would seem that it's better to go on the cloud, and this is what's happening in developed countries. People in developed countries are moving towards replacing on-premise applications with cloud solutions. However, that's not happening in Bangladesh or India because the human-resource cost is not so expensive, so a SaaS solution such as Oracle ERP Cloud isn't as popular. People here in Bangladesh do not have much interest in purchasing SaaS-based modules.
The pricing for Oracle ERP Cloud is on par with other top solutions. We are primarily a user-centric model of the transactional model in terms of what people do enter. This is centralized, so licensing costs for a user are not a concern in our case. We have a bundled five-year contract that includes technical support, and all features with no additional payment required.
We have an annual license with Oracle, however, if we need additional features we do pay for them.
The price of course could be cheaper. For an ERP Cloud, the pricing is relatively high.
The solution allows us to save on costs. It's less expensive than an on-prem version. We pay a yearly licensing fee. It's still relatively expensive. We'd like it to be cheaper still. Technical support runs on tiers. Better service requires an extra payment.
The solution is expensive and there are some services that are extra costs.