The cost is comparatively less, which makes it preferable for small and medium-sized businesses. The cost is not expensive. We are using a per-user pricing model.
The solution delivers the same capabilities of SAP or Oracle at about 30% to 40% of the cost. Prices are based on a concurrent model and vary depending on the type of user. There are different layers such as full, distribution, finance, and inquiry. An on-premises license for a full user is about $4,000 plus a 20% annual fee for support. The total for a full user comes to about $4,800 per user, per year. The lowest level is an inquiry user which runs about $800 per user, per year. The solution is definitely worth the money. Looking at the capabilities, the full license could be priced better to allow clients to expand. At $4,000 for a full user, the solution is quite expensive compared to other products.
Managing Director at a tech services company with 1-10 employees
Real User
2021-04-29T19:55:06Z
Apr 29, 2021
It is very cheap. There are no additional charges, but the problem is that you have to acquire an additional supporting system such as a budgeting system. You will have to implement the integration and maintain two systems. So, you need to pay for the license of that budgeting system and this one. You also need to pay the license for the payroll and integration. There are all these integrations that you have to pay for.
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) is the cohesive management of various central business practices engaged in a myriad of data management categories, such as finance, product and production planning, marketing and sales, manufacturing and materials and inventory management. A company depends on its data through IT and DevOps who are tasked with vital IT capital expenditure investments. IT key opinion leaders rely on ERPs to collect, store and interpret business data. Of course, security is...
The cost is comparatively less, which makes it preferable for small and medium-sized businesses. The cost is not expensive. We are using a per-user pricing model.
The price of this solution is expensive. However, it depends on the number of branches used. The price can be upwards of $40,000 annually.
The solution delivers the same capabilities of SAP or Oracle at about 30% to 40% of the cost. Prices are based on a concurrent model and vary depending on the type of user. There are different layers such as full, distribution, finance, and inquiry. An on-premises license for a full user is about $4,000 plus a 20% annual fee for support. The total for a full user comes to about $4,800 per user, per year. The lowest level is an inquiry user which runs about $800 per user, per year. The solution is definitely worth the money. Looking at the capabilities, the full license could be priced better to allow clients to expand. At $4,000 for a full user, the solution is quite expensive compared to other products.
It is very cheap. There are no additional charges, but the problem is that you have to acquire an additional supporting system such as a budgeting system. You will have to implement the integration and maintain two systems. So, you need to pay for the license of that budgeting system and this one. You also need to pay the license for the payroll and integration. There are all these integrations that you have to pay for.