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The subscription software revolution

Ah, the cloud. The debate rages on. If youโ€™re a fan of Adobe products, or even just a user, you may have noted a significant announcement this week. The company said its Creative Suite, which contains products such as Photoshop and Illustrator, will no longer be sold as stand-alone software. Instead, the Adobe Creative Suite […]

Ah, the cloud. The debate rages on.

If youโ€™re a fan of Adobe products, or even just a user, you may have noted a significant announcement this week. The company said its Creative Suite, which contains products such as Photoshop and Illustrator, will no longer be sold as stand-alone software.

Instead, the Adobe Creative Suite will now operate on a cloud-based subscription model only. This type of model has been available for a while, but now Adobe says it will only sell the Creative Suite this way.

Itโ€™s a significant change. Suddenly companies which rely on these software packages will be thrust into using a cloud computing solution they may not have even prepared for.

Thatโ€™s not to say itโ€™s a bad decision. Obviously Adobe sees merit in heading in this direction in a business sense, and thatโ€™s fine. The subscription economy is becoming a much more sustainable business model, in any case.

Companies like Hulu, Netflix and Spotify are thriving on the idea of the subscription-based business model. Just get your users to pay a few dollars each month instead of paying over $100 for a stand-alone piece of software. Not only does it help cashflow, but itโ€™s also more technically sustainable. Changes to the software can be rolled out faster, and so on. Back-up technology companies thrive on this type of model.

Companies have become accustomed to having the โ€œshould we go into the cloudโ€ debate. The only problem with Adobeโ€™s approach here is that it has simply dismissed that debate entirely. Whether businesses using Adobe products like it or not, a subscription model is now a part of their business plan.

Most of the time, thatโ€™s going to be a good idea. And itโ€™s why they should be looking to adopt subscription-model plans whenever they can.

There are always going to be risks with cloud computing. But complete outages are rare, and itโ€™s about time businesses started figuring out where they can adopt subscription models rather than simply pay for licensed software.

Itโ€™s not always going to be a cost benefit. But whether you like it or not, subscription models are the software industryโ€™s latest game. Why do you think so many accounting software companies are creating cloud-based solutions now?

You may have missed the Adobe announcement this week, and thatโ€™s fine. But pay attention, because sooner or later a subscription-based decision will need to be made in your business. And you need to be prepared.