TRENDS IN FEE-BASED SUPPORT.
[SOME CHARTS OMITTED]
As industries mature, prices collapse. That's one of the
textbook laws of economics that's been causing so much grief in the
software industry these days. But there's another economic law
that offers better news: In mature markets, customers almost invariably
spend more freely for support services.
In fact, fee-based services--which typically include premium
support plans, maintenance, training, and consulting--have quietly
emerged as a major source of revenue for a growing number of developers
and publishers. Especially in high- end enterprise and professional
markets, customers routinely expect to buy support services throughout
the entire life-cycle of product ownership. For enterprise companies,
these services often contribute 30%-40% of the vendor's total
revenues, and may even be more profitable than the product side of the
business.
In the world of desktop applications, publishers have been slower
to develop fee-based service offerings (other than modest attempts at
post-warranty telephone support). However, the Internet has drastically
changed the economics of service delivery. The cost of delivering
knowledge-based services to customers is approaching zero, and a few
pioneers are experimenting with outsourcing and subscription models that
transform a product (for example, tax software) into a Web-based
service. For some applications, the product itself may become little
more than a Cracker Jack prize that helps sell a much more lucrative
portfolio of services.
Before we reach that point, however, it's clear that the
majority of software companies will have to become more sophisticated
about managing and marketing their fee-based services. Not surprisingly,
developers and publishers have always paid close attention to their
product operations--but even the best- managed companies tend to have
only sketchy data about service profitability and performance. They
rarely benchmark their operations and service offerings against other
companies; they set service prices in a vacuum and design programs with
almost no input from customers. If software companies had better
information and more rigorous internal metrics, we suspect the
profitability of fee-based services would rise dramatically for the
whole industry.
To help close this information gap, Softletter and the Association
of Support Professionals (ASP) recently recently conducted a joint
survey of trends in fee- based services. We collected data from a
substantial base of respondents, 222 companies (see page 8), that offer
some form of fee-based services. We've drawn on this data to
describe current service pricing levels and pricing models, program
features, and marketplace trends. And here's what we found:
COPYRIGHT 1999 Soft-letter Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.