SaaS vendors use opaque pricing to maximize the amount you pay. On Capiche, people share their actual invoices and negotiation tactics.
Review sites try to push you toward the products that pay them affiliate fees. On Capiche, people give honest details of why we use the software tools we use.
Customer Success Ninjas arent always, well, ninjas. On Capiche, we work together to solve each others problems.
Join us in ending information asymmetry in business software.
Our mission here is simple:
We want you to know what other companies actually pay for software.
We want you to know you got a fair price, not just the raw end of an A/B test.
We want you to know the best tricks to save money.
And we want you to never sit through a demo call again just to find out how much a product costs.
When you choose a movie or a place to grab lunch, anonymous crowd-sourced reviews are quite helpful.
When you choose software to use in your company, tools that cost thousands of dollars and impact your team and business, you need more.
Thats why were building out a question/answer community around SaaS. Its not about distilling products down to star ratingsits about going deeper.
Why did people choose this product? Which product is best for a specific use-case, team size, or industry? How do teams actually implement and use this product? What are its best features, its hidden tricks, the other tools it plays best with?
That's what gets answered at Capiche.
Education is expensive. If theres one tiny bright side to the costs of tuition and textbooks, though, its that tech is far cheaper as a student.
Its not only the regular back-to-school discounts on laptops or Apple Music and Spotifys half priced student plans that help. You can also get much of
Last week there was a trend on Twitter where people offer one prediction/hot take for each Like their tweet gets. Since we come across so many interesting nuggets on SaaS pricing, I decided to try it out:
https://twitter.com/awwstn/status/1213215748979445761
The response blew me away -- according
How do you build a company that over a million users trust with their deepest secrets: Website login credentials, financial data, ID, and other secure documents? Then how do you keep those customers happy, while also meeting the needs of more than 50,000 businesses?
In Capiche's community AMA with