![]() and if you're giving that away in a bubble 1.0 "anything for customers" model you should be worried. It was illustrated so well with the backblaze-costco-drivearound-silliness - storage really costs something, and it's price sensitive enough that you'll drive around all week ripping desktop drives out of USB enclosures. Īlthough I suppose that if the range is 10-200 GB, and you're paying $9 (or whatever) there is a pretty strong incentive to keep you as close to the bottom of that range as possible - and you can bank on their policies and system behaviors to reflect that incentive.īut the real worry with dropbox is just the unsustainable business model. It's different with dropbox, though, since their pricing (beyond the free 2GB) is not flat rate. ![]() The link I keep posting in conversations like this is the one where we wrote about the antagonistic relationship that "free", almost free, and flat-rate service providers enter you into: Here are the Dropbox pricing models if billed annually: Plus Plan: for individuals 119.88 for 1 user Family Plan: for households 203.88 for up to 6 users Professional Plan: for solo workers 198. It can be billed monthly, or annually at a discounted rate. How about I just do my job, and buy things I need (like dropbox), and everyone is happy. The Dropbox pricing differs according to the five plans. Free space for completing tasks? That does not even make sense, because if you have to complete some task it is obviously not free. You will be amazed at how quickly your tolerance for such things decreases with age. Dropbox has 3 pricing edition (s), from 11.99 to 19.99. > you don't need to spam friends, there are regularly things like contests (Dropquest 2011, 2012) where you get free space for completing tasks Just let me pay an appropriate amount for an appropriate usage! But I am the only person I know with a pro account, since it's such overkill, and even I kind of resent paying for so much more than I need. The Dropbox Advanced plan for teams and enterprises starts at. The Dropbox Professional plan offers 3TB of storage space, while the Standard plan offers 5TB of space. Well no it's not, obviously, since that's what I pay. The Work category has two plans available: Dropbox Professional for individuals starting at 16.58 per month, while Dropbox Standard for teams starting at 12.5 per user per month. ![]() > people who pay low amounts are the most demanding in terms of supportĭo you really think this would be a big factor for Dropbox? If so - just say any under-100GB account has the same support as the free account. The Standard pricing plan costs 15.00 per user per month and provides 5 TB of storage. Each plan offers cloud storage and file synchronization capabilities, but beyond that the plans vary on which Dropbox features they support. Full automated services should not be subject to a monthly minimum, and they shouldn't need support. Every domain name registrar on the planet - $12 a year or so. Just last week I signed up for $5/month. There is a case to be made that charging less than $10/month for a service is not good business. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |