It can be expensive, but if you see the functionalities and the processes, it's not as expensive as other applications. We pay about 1 million Mexican Pesos per year for all 100 licenses.
That is also where the sale is. You need a full-time person to maintain Planview and Projectplace, as well as a technical person who can solve problems and do new implementations. You will need three people to manage Planview and Projectplace alone. It's a fixed cost, and each of these will most likely cost a couple hundred thousand dollars per year. Licensing, in my opinion, was absurd. There were share licenses, one-to-one licenses where everyone with a Projectplace license could access Planview, and licenses where everyone could access Planview but couldn't do a certain set of activities that were really necessary. I would say the licensing maturity was probably a three out of five. They have a long way to go before they can scale out and retain enterprise customers. You have to pay for Projectplace access, for example, and then you can choose between a few models. It depends on the model. If you have to add per user, then each user has an additional cost. If you choose different modeling, which I believe is more, or you get a certain amount of resources and the people are not counted was one approach, but it was extremely confusing. As a result, the way it was implemented seemed to incur additional costs everywhere.
The cost of this product is mid-range. It's not too expensive but not the cheapest on the market. It's something that anyone can afford. When you consider the features, the price is reasonable. There are no costs in addition to the standard licensing fees.
Program Manager at a energy/utilities company with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
2021-11-26T17:54:38Z
Nov 26, 2021
I believe it is a good value for money for the service they provide and the tailored program. When compared to Microsoft Project. In my opinion, the pricing is reasonable.
Manufacturing Manager, Capital COE at a manufacturing company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2021-10-01T16:14:00Z
Oct 1, 2021
I think the price of Projectplace is highly reasonable for the amount of functionality that you get. We have what they call a FLEX License. That means you get Projectplace, Enterprise One, and Leankits all on the same license. That's great because then you can use the other products without any additional cost.
Getting work done is easy when your team has the best project management tools that enable traditional and accidental project managers to plan and execute work with their teams. Planview ProjectPlace offers a wide range of powerful work and project management tools that enable traditional and accidental project managers to plan and execute work with their teams, track progress in real time, and ultimately achieve goals.
It can be expensive, but if you see the functionalities and the processes, it's not as expensive as other applications. We pay about 1 million Mexican Pesos per year for all 100 licenses.
That is also where the sale is. You need a full-time person to maintain Planview and Projectplace, as well as a technical person who can solve problems and do new implementations. You will need three people to manage Planview and Projectplace alone. It's a fixed cost, and each of these will most likely cost a couple hundred thousand dollars per year. Licensing, in my opinion, was absurd. There were share licenses, one-to-one licenses where everyone with a Projectplace license could access Planview, and licenses where everyone could access Planview but couldn't do a certain set of activities that were really necessary. I would say the licensing maturity was probably a three out of five. They have a long way to go before they can scale out and retain enterprise customers. You have to pay for Projectplace access, for example, and then you can choose between a few models. It depends on the model. If you have to add per user, then each user has an additional cost. If you choose different modeling, which I believe is more, or you get a certain amount of resources and the people are not counted was one approach, but it was extremely confusing. As a result, the way it was implemented seemed to incur additional costs everywhere.
The cost of this product is mid-range. It's not too expensive but not the cheapest on the market. It's something that anyone can afford. When you consider the features, the price is reasonable. There are no costs in addition to the standard licensing fees.
I believe it is a good value for money for the service they provide and the tailored program. When compared to Microsoft Project. In my opinion, the pricing is reasonable.
I think the price of Projectplace is highly reasonable for the amount of functionality that you get. We have what they call a FLEX License. That means you get Projectplace, Enterprise One, and Leankits all on the same license. That's great because then you can use the other products without any additional cost.