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I am trying to understand and clarify the Stack Overflow for Teams pricing model. I need to justify this to my organization.

The pricing I saw on Stack Overflow for Teams says that it is $1 per user per month for the first 10 users, and then $5 per month for every additional user?

That's a reverse quantity discount, in other words, the more people you have the more you pay? Who does that?

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  • Related confusion, but in the opposite direction (This person was surprised that it wasn't a flat $5 per person, and that they got 10 people for the price of 2): SO Teams ad shows a higher price than expected (the real price is lower!)
    – Davy M
    Apr 1, 2019 at 18:41
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    Note that Stack Overflow for Teams is more marketed towards small teams; hence the discount for the first 10 users. Stack Overflow Enterprise is another product that is similar, but geared towards much larger teams.
    – Davy M
    Apr 1, 2019 at 18:43
  • It's technically a 400% increase, but I get your point.
    – S.S. Anne
    Sep 11, 2019 at 21:03

1 Answer 1

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This answer is based on general knowledge of the product and not insider knowledge. At least I don't think anyone explained it to me.

Stack Overflow for Teams depends on the network effect to be useful. While it could be handy for a single employee to document their work (and I've used our Team that way), it comes into its own when there are more people answering each other's questions. Ideally, the entire team would be active on the site as a matter of course. A per-person price risks teams saving money by leaving off members who might have the best answer to a particular question. So that's not ideal.

On the other hand, a flat monthly fee doesn't seem fair either— especially since we have Enterprise for larger teams/organizations. It would certainly leave money on the table since we'd either price the product for large teams (causing small teams to look elsewhere) or price the product for small teams (which would be a big discount for teams willing to pay more). For more on the economics of pricing and segmentation, please read Joel's Camels and Rubber Duckies.

Fortunately, as in so many areas of life, site participation follows a power law. A small number of participants contribute a disproportionate amount of content. So while we'd like to encourage teams to include every member, they can probably start building a useful corpus with the top X most interested users. Charging a flat fee for the first X users encourages customers to fill up those slots, which maximizes the odds they'll reach critical mass. Ten seems as good a number as any and it doesn't seem too onerous for organizations to pay $10 a month for this sort of product.

Once a Team starts to show its value, I expect customers will be interested in adding more users. Not only will more users potentially add content, but they will benefit from existing content too. There's a real value in having voters who encourage helpful users by upvoting their content. I don't think customers will worry too much about the price if answers on the site save developers a few minutes a week (net). From what I can tell, $5 is cheaper than Slack.

Bottom line, the $10 price is intended to get small teams in the door and make it easier for larger teams to try the product out. Once an organization is ready to pay for more than 10 users, they should be pretty well convinced that the price per user is worthwhile. At the moment, Teams pricing is straightforward to explain and understand, which is probably a plus.

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  • Slack is free (as long as you don't have any of the fancier features).
    – S.S. Anne
    Sep 11, 2019 at 21:03

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