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Adobe Cloud Price Increase

Explorer ,
Apr 16, 2013 Apr 16, 2013

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I only use Photoshop and Lightroom, and my monthly subscription is going up from $30 to $50.  I have been unable to find anywhere on the Adobe website to send a complaint.  There seems to be no way to penetrate Adobe's defenses against customer contact.  I found an online chat option but after 1/2 hour of waiting it simply dumped me back to the bottom of the queue.  Does anyone have an email address for an Adobe customer service employee who is fluent in  English?  Thank you!!!

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LEGEND ,
Apr 17, 2013 Apr 17, 2013

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Alas, customer service is not reachable by email.

This forum here is to discuss how the forums themselves work.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 17, 2013 Apr 17, 2013

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Is that a result of the one year intro rate expiring? If so, that's the actual price of Creative Cloud and there's not really a price increase. You can always cancel if you'd like but, I'm not sure what you want to complain about.

Have you tried this page for contact info?

http://www.adobe.com/company/contact.html?promoid=JZEGC

Bob

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Explorer ,
Apr 17, 2013 Apr 17, 2013

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I want to complain that $50 a month is too high for two programs and suggest Adobe offers more flexible pricing options for people not needing the whole suite of products.   I want to complain that Adobe doesn't offer it's customers any way to make a complaint. Yes, I've seen that contact page, it just forces you into FAQs or Knowledge based searches, doesn't put you in contact with a human being unless you're buying.  Sales is not the same thing as customer service.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 17, 2013 Apr 17, 2013

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You can subscribe to only one application for $19.99/month. For two that would be $39.98 and you'd save $10/month.

I'm sorry you're unhappy but besides the two apps, you're only other recourse is cancelling. The fact that $30/month was an introductory price is made pretty clear.

Bob

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Explorer ,
Apr 17, 2013 Apr 17, 2013

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Bob Levine wrote:

You can subscribe to only one application for $19.99/month. For two that would be $39.98 and you'd save $10/month.

I'm sorry you're unhappy but besides the two apps, you're only other recourse is cancelling. The fact that $30/month was an introductory price is made pretty clear.

Bob

Bob,  that is incorrect.  Lightroom is not available as a subscription.  I was able to get through to online chat tonight and they confirmed that.  That is okay since I own Lightroom outside the Cloud, but Adobe hasn't said yet whether the forthcoming Lightroom 5 will require a Cloud subscription.  So it's not clear that you can buy two single applications, I think it's one or everything which is not very flexible.  Thank you for the sympathy, but I'm not looking for that, I'm simply  looking for a way to pass my complaint along to Adobe.  The Chat person doesn't do that either.  Thank you for attempting to assist.

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LEGEND ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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gspam1 wrote:

…I'm simply  looking for a way to pass my complaint along to Adobe…

That would be as fruitful as sending a complaint to the tax collection authority in any country to complain about the taxes being too high.

I'm afraid once folks are locked in to the subscription mode, Adobe will raise prices freely.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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You're right. Sorry for the misinformation.

That said, I really think your best bet for a complaint to receive attention is by snail mail. So few people use that route that it has more impact. Try a letter to the CEO at their corporate headquarters in San Jose.

Good luck,

Bob

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LEGEND ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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Bob Levine wrote:

...

Try a letter to the CEO at their corporate headquarters in San Jose.

Good luck,

Bob

Do you really think the CEO will even read it?

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Community Expert ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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Someone WILL read it, Claudio...yes.

Bob

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LEGEND ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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That's true, but I wouldn't bet that it will be the CEO.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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Better chance of posting a complaint here, though.

Bob

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Mentor ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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Bob Levine wrote:

Better chance of posting a complaint here, though.

Bob

But  the Brass don't read these forums.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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That was a very serious typo. Should have said, a better chance THAN posting here.

Bob

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Enthusiast ,
Apr 18, 2013 Apr 18, 2013

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I did the math for my particular situation.

It will cost me anywhere between 250-650% more than previous pricing methods/policies.

Seems Adobe is just another one of those companies that is about putting the screws to its customers during the recession.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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There is never a perfect solution for everyone. The math, however, is apparently working for a good deal of people based on the subscription and revenue numbers Adobe has been releasing.

Bob

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Enthusiast ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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Yeah.  No 1 solution works for everyone.  (And $50/month DEFINITELY doesn't work for me)

I'd like to do business with Adobe, cause the software is good, but I've yet to justify it is worth 2.5x my budgeted amount.  I would have to keep my current version software 2.5x longer than normal.  Half this problem stems from the fact that they hit me with the double whammy (Price increase AND tightened upgrade policy)

If upgrades to Web&Design Premium were back to the "2 versions back" policy, I could see a $800-850USD price being justified to upgrade to a non-Cloud version.  But this "You must be no more than 1 version behind to qualify for the upgrade pricing" is too much.

And if Adobe thinks that extending the upgrade policy to 2 versions, but then charging 2 different prices is a solution, it is not.

ie

CS6 > CS7 (1 version back, qualifies) = $799USD

CS5 > CS7 (2 versions back, "qualifies") = $1299USD  << That is disrepectful, and not a true "upgrade policy".

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Community Expert ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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I get that this won't work for everyone because nothing does, but let's

get one thing clear...nobody as been hit with a price increase.

When you signed up you got an introductory rate that was clearly for one

year. That year is up.

Bob

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Enthusiast ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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Actually, Bob.  That's not exactly true.  You're assuming we are speaking from a $29.99/mo intro rate to $49.99/mo rate hike.  And yes, I agree with you, that an intro rate is just that, introductory.

But I'm speaking from a cost of ownership standpoint. I used to upgrade every 2 versions, spending about $800USD for the latest version of the 7 programs I use. Now, with Adobe's more restrictive "1 version back" policy, I would have to pay for 2 upgrades (CS5 > CS6 > CS7) at $800 a pop ($1600).

It's wonky to do the math, because before every 2 versions came out in 36 months.  Now, every versions comes out in 48 months (I'll use a median value between them and say 42 months)  So $800 for 42 months of ownership is $19.04/month.

There are 4 solutions I have here:

SOLUTION #1 - Upgrade to CS6, then CS7.  That's $800 per upgrade, $1600 total, over a lifespan of 42median months = $38.09/mo (a 100% price increase)


SOLUTION #2 - Buy CS7 Web/Design Premium outright at $1900.  Over a lifespan of 42 months = $45.23/mo (a 238% price increase)

SOLUTION #3 - Buy $50/mo Cloud Subscription.  Even taking intro year pricing into account that's $1860 over 42 months = $44.28/mo (a 233% price increase)

SOLUTION #4 - Buy 7 $20/mo App Subscriptions (to have only the apps I need). = $5880 over 42 months = $140/mo (a 735% price increase)

Solutions 1-3 give me more apps then I want/need.  Solution 4 gives me just the apps I need, but due to the horrible ala carte pricing method, once you need over 2 programs, you might as well get all 17 in the Cloud.

If $50/mo gets you all apps, I would find it reasonable that Web/Design OR Production could cost you $25/mo)  That would be a 31% price increase, and though steep, I would meet Adobe "halfway" and purchase such a price to stay on those apps at their latest version at that monthly expense.

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Community Expert ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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You need to do the math for new versions every 12 months. That's what you're going to see from now on.

I also think it's important to point out that Adobe is not the only company to eliminate all this upgrade pricing. You cannot buy a MS Office upgrade. You cannot buy an Intuit upgrade. This is simply the way the software industry is moving.

I wrote a blog post a while back you might find interesting, especially the comments. http://boblevine.us/what-will-it-take-to-move-everyone-to-creative-cloud/

Feel free to chime in there. As I've said before, you never know who's watching.

Bob

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Mentor ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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We can absolutely guarntee that the Brass atadobe will never see these forums. They can't be bothered

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Mentor ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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Adobe is strictly out to make money if they burn a few bridges they don't care. Taking care of customers is of little use to them.

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Guest
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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Adobe is strictly out to make money

A charitable organization like Adobe should not practice rip-off tactics when it could give out its software free of charge.  All charities do that; Don't you think so?

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Enthusiast ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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With as small as the CS5 > CS5.5 upgrades were, and the previous announcement of a .5 version increase per 12 months, I can't see the half versions being considered a full version, nor would I choose to believe that Adobe could innovate to any noticeable degree by releasing full versions in a 12 month cycle.  It would be, in my mind, akin to Firefox, whom at around version 4 started coming out with full versions every 2-3 weeks (it felt).  They are now at version 20, seemingly treating major version revision numbers like they were minor versions.

Adobe hit consumers with a 1-2 punch, first taking away their upgrade options (again, I understand Adobe's moving away from the ability to have a piece of software qualify for upgrade when it was many versions behind, but I still feel a 2-versions back is more than respectable without forcing your customer base to shell out money, especially if they DO plan to decrease the product cycle timeframe)

Secondly, they put together some horrible ala carte functionality where once you hit 2 applications, you might as well get all 17.  How skewed is that? 

I understand the mentality, why buy 1 at $1 when you can get 2 for $1.75.  But to really entice the consumer and provide as wide an array of solutions to their needs as possible, Adobe could have EASILY done a proper ala carte system where 1 product was relatively expensive, but as you added more products, you saved more money.

As per your article indicated, single applications are inherrently expensive.  But with the Design and Web bundles being merged (now providing me with more applications that I don't need), there simply is no way to affordably get yourself the applications you want or to stay within a respectable budget.

There's something sinister about the Cloud.  How can you offer $50/month for EVERY application you make (ie, the Master Collection, a bundle far too expensive for many customers) and then NOT offer any type of alternate plan? And on top of that they say "Your upgrade pricing policy is now revoked.  1 version back, or you might as well pay full"

I don't think you can compare Office to CS.  For what Cloud charges per year, you can have access to EVERY Office tool for the next 4 years.  If you convert what MS did with Office to what Adobe SHOULD do with the "Master Collection", they would be charging $300/year (~$25/month), exactly the price I'd be willing to pay for just 7-8 products, not even all of them.

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Enthusiast ,
Apr 19, 2013 Apr 19, 2013

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Just to clarify my point, I fully understand Adobe has to make money.  All corporations do, otherwise you go bankrupt and then the company AND the users lose out.

I also understand that prices can fluctuate.  But Adobe needs to understand, too, that we're in a recession.  And even though the status quo seems to think "Recession = Jack Prices because people can afford more", the reality is quite the opposite.  Personally, I can go another couple versions without upgrading to a new version.  But with Adobe's overt fondness of money, I honestly now would not put it past them releasing patches that start to break older versions of their software.  I mean, if they heavy hand consumers in the current fashion, what's to stop them from going a step further?

Adobe has no competition.  The closest thing is the Microsoft Expression Suite, which is complete garbage.  Now, being the 800lb gorilla, Adobe's been free to either respect its customers or abuse them.

I am holding out final judgement until I hear what they have to say in May.  It hurts to have loved Adobe as much as I have, and now to say such seemingly mean things about them, but I have to call it as I see it.  When someone shows they only care about you for your money, it's only natural to look upon such people in disgust.

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