Pricing Models
Create and manage your product catalog
Pricing Models
In B2B SaaS environments, pricing models need to be flexible to match various use cases and customer requirements. Alguna supports several pricing models that can be applied to your products and services, from simple fixed fees to complex metered billing structures.
1. Fixed Pricing Model
Definition:
The Fixed pricing model charges a consistent, unchanging fee for a product or service, regardless of usage. This is ideal for services with predictable costs.
Example:
A company like Salesforce offers fixed pricing for certain packages, such as a CRM tool where users pay a flat monthly fee of $9.99 per user, regardless of how much the service is used.
2. Unit-Based Pricing Model
Definition:
With the Unit-Based model, customers are charged a fixed price for each unit of service or product used. This model is common for services that are billed based on measurable quantities like data usage or transactions.
Example:
Amazon Web Services (AWS) uses unit-based pricing for services like S3 storage, where businesses pay per GB of data stored or transferred.
3. Tiered Pricing Model
Definition:
In the Tiered pricing model, the price per unit decreases as customers use more of the service. This incentivizes higher usage by offering lower prices at higher usage tiers.
Example:
HubSpot uses a tiered pricing model for its marketing tools, where the cost per lead decreases as the number of leads increases, encouraging businesses to scale their usage.
4. Prepaid with Overages
Definition:
In this model, customers prepay for a certain amount of usage, with additional overage charges applied if the customer exceeds the prepaid amount.
Example:
Twilio offers prepaid packages for messaging services, where businesses prepay for a set number of messages. If they exceed this amount, they are charged an overage fee per additional message.
5. Volume Percentage Pricing Model
Definition:
The Volume Percentage model charges a percentage of the total value of transactions or usage. This is particularly useful for transaction-based businesses where fees are proportional to the value processed.
Example:
Stripe applies a volume percentage pricing model, where businesses are charged a percentage (e.g., 2.9% + $0.30) of each transaction processed through the Stripe platform.
6. Graduated Percentage Pricing Model
Definition:
The Graduated Percentage pricing model applies different percentage rates based on usage. Higher usage leads to lower percentage fees, making it attractive for businesses with growing volumes.
Example:
A B2B payments company like Adyen uses this model to charge lower fees for businesses processing larger transaction volumes, such as 10% for the first $100,000 and lower percentages for higher volumes.