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Adobe Launches Subscription Model for CS products
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Adobe has launched a new subscription model for their Creative Suite 5.5 products, allowing for month to month subscriptions or annual subscriptions (at a discount) of their software products. From reading their FAQs, the subscription products and the retail/perpetual off the shelf products are the same functionality-wise - just that instead of putting in a serial number to register the product, you enter a subscription activation key. Once your subscription expires however, the software will deactivate itself after a 5 day grace period. You can re-activate the subscription anytime within six months, otherwise you will need to get a new account and activate the subscription again. While under subscription, you can download and upgrade to new versions as they get released without any extra charges.

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Does it make financial sense to use the subscription model?

At today's RRP pricing, Photoshop is $699 for the full version and $199 for the upgrade. Photoshop Extended is $999 for the full version and $349 for the upgrade.
According to Wikipedia - new versions come outroughly every 18 months to 2 years. The gap is becoming less more recently.

So if you bought the full version of Photoshop and upgraded every 18 months, it would set you back $1097 in 3 years time (base + 2 upgrades), and $1296 in 5 years time (base + 3 upgrades). For Photoshop Extended it would be $1697 in 3 years and $2046 in 5 years.

For the subscription model, Photoshop would set you back $420 in 1 year, $1260 in 3 years and $2100 in 5 years using the annual subscription pricing model. For the month to month subscription model you would be paying $588 in 1 year, $1764 in 3 years and $2940 in 5 years. For Photoshop Extended, it works out to be $588 in 1 year, $1764 in 3 years and $2940 in 5 years for the annual model, and $900 in 1 year, $2700 in 3 years and $4500 in 5 years.

For a personal user, I can't see how the cost of the subscription model can be justified - it doesn't make much sense. The month to month pricing is just too much unless you are the type of user that only uses it a few months in a year. The annual pricing is a bit more reasonable, and 1 year of subscription costs less than the full version of the product, but anything after 1 year you start losing money compared to buying the products outright.

The only reason I can see for using this model is that if you are a business and want to amortise your costs on a month by month basis as opposed to a large initial outlay but I think that kind of thinking would be better suited for something like a car or house rather than a software product.


What do you think of this new subscription model, and do you see yourself using it?
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Messages In This Thread
Adobe Launches Subscription Model for CS products - by shuttertalk - Apr 12, 2011, 21:47

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