The platform's pricing depends on the specific number of users. It will cost more if purchased for five users and would be reasonable and negotiable for 1000 users.
On the licensing part, Infor is too expensive. But people still prefer it because, though it is highly costly, it is very hard and price-sensitive. People prefer it because their business needs are connected to it. So, for example, if I create a customer in the Philippines, it may cost around $82,000, which includes the ION and WMS modules that allow them to manage the warehouse through the application. The cost of importing Infor M3 is typically between $120,000 to $150,000. The CloudSuite package will include multiple applications like factor track, factor taxes, and tools to manage employee availability, such as attendance and punch times. This package can be renewed annually. In addition to finance and operations, it also includes manufacturing, logistics, quality, sales, service, and project management applications. Everything has a set of applications in that. So you'll get the operating systems, you'll get first, and you'll get finance, manufacturing, logistics, quality, sales, and service projects. It's the entire, complete suite you'll get in Infor, not only one. So whichever you want, you'll get everything combined; a bundle of items in one application.
I'm working for a German company, but I'm located in Portugal. In the German market, Infor's price isn't an issue for clients, but Infor is losing market share every year to SAP in Portugal. Portuguese clients find SAP more affordable. Infor needs to work on this. Before Infor implemented this cloud solution, it was strictly a solution for large and medium-sized enterprises. CloudSuite has made it more affordable for smaller companies, but it's probably still too expensive for some. I think CloudSuite can work for small companies with 10 million euros in annual revenue or more, but I think it won't work for anything less than that.
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...
As for pricing, I secured a favorable deal at around $80,000 yearly for 5 years, but it was a one-time opportunity.
The product is cheap and has an annual subscription only. I rate the product’s pricing a three out of ten, where one is cheap, and ten is expensive.
The platform's pricing depends on the specific number of users. It will cost more if purchased for five users and would be reasonable and negotiable for 1000 users.
On the licensing part, Infor is too expensive. But people still prefer it because, though it is highly costly, it is very hard and price-sensitive. People prefer it because their business needs are connected to it. So, for example, if I create a customer in the Philippines, it may cost around $82,000, which includes the ION and WMS modules that allow them to manage the warehouse through the application. The cost of importing Infor M3 is typically between $120,000 to $150,000. The CloudSuite package will include multiple applications like factor track, factor taxes, and tools to manage employee availability, such as attendance and punch times. This package can be renewed annually. In addition to finance and operations, it also includes manufacturing, logistics, quality, sales, service, and project management applications. Everything has a set of applications in that. So you'll get the operating systems, you'll get first, and you'll get finance, manufacturing, logistics, quality, sales, and service projects. It's the entire, complete suite you'll get in Infor, not only one. So whichever you want, you'll get everything combined; a bundle of items in one application.
I'm working for a German company, but I'm located in Portugal. In the German market, Infor's price isn't an issue for clients, but Infor is losing market share every year to SAP in Portugal. Portuguese clients find SAP more affordable. Infor needs to work on this. Before Infor implemented this cloud solution, it was strictly a solution for large and medium-sized enterprises. CloudSuite has made it more affordable for smaller companies, but it's probably still too expensive for some. I think CloudSuite can work for small companies with 10 million euros in annual revenue or more, but I think it won't work for anything less than that.
Pricing is always an area where there is room for improvement.