WildWestDesigns said:Wait until talking about software whose perpetual licenses cost around $15k for 1 seat.
Any company charging that kind of money is not selling to any casual, individual users, unlike Corel. CorelDRAW is more of a mainstream software application. It isn't just for businesses. The vendors selling very high priced niche software are selling to companies who can write off that cost.
CorelDRAW 2019 versus the 2018 version seems little more than a re-arrangement of one menu and a pixel-based editing add-on. Is that worth $199, plus $99 per year from here on out just to keep a perpetual license "alive?"
WildWestDesigns said:You can pretty much see this with any SaaS package. Some may start out all well and good as far as quality of updates go, at some point marginal utility kicks in for everything. At that point, acquiring companies and integration of those acquisitions is about the only way to keep "innovating".
The software vendor definitely has to do something to sweeten the deal. I feel like Adobe offers a lot of value for a $52.99 per month subscription. But a huge number of people disagree (and many of those in disagreement are stuck between a rock and hard place, forced to do business with Adobe since they're almost a monopoly of sorts). As much as I've liked using CorelDRAW for nearly 30 years I'll be the first to say Corel is not in the same league as Adobe. Corel is struggling to remain relevant in the graphics industry. Worse yet, the company is debt-saddled, thanks to a vulture capital firm taking control years ago and then going on an acquisition spree. I feel as if this policy change for upgrade pricing is a big roll of the dice dictated by that vulture capital firm. Those day-traders could end up totally wrecking Corel with this user-shakedown gamble. Corel doesn't control industry standards on much of anything in the graphics world. But they think they're in a position to ramp up prices on a somewhat small user base? We'll see how it plays out.