Sorry for the clanging. As I indicated, I think that the correct anchor for this pricing is "HR expenditures" (like payroll) not "cheap web services anybody in the organization can start using on their own initiative as long as they have a credit card". (Why do I think that? Because I think you need HR buy-in to sell any plan costing more than $20 / month, so you might as well charge them through the nose to let them know you're serious.) However, I was focusing on the need for simplification in that point, so I picked price points that they demonstrated they'd be more or less comfortable with charging for my example.
I would be interested in hearing your reasons why the CALL option is "not right". Here are my reasons why it is:
As it stands currently, they will not sell any plans whatsoever to companies with 100+ users. Not a single one. The reason is that when you get to 100+ users you have just won yourself a ticket aboard the USS Enterprise Sales. There are now a few hundred obstacles standing in front of the sale where there weren't when you were selling to a man who routinely invites all his employees over for dinner. If you haven't done Enterprise Sales before, you don't know what these obstacles are yet. So, let the prospective customers who you're going to crash and burn trying to sell to tell you what their objections are.
For example, hypothetically suppose one of my day job's customers was looking for a solution to this, and you took my advice and had them call you. Here's the first question they're going to ask: "What is your policy for compliance with the Personal Information Protection Act?" And the answer presumably sounds like "Umm... let me Google that." Now, let's be honest: you're going to totally crash and burn with that sales call. But you've learned something useful: a) there is a Personal Information Protection Act and b) somebody who was interested enough in my software to pick up the phone/send an email/etc asked about it first, which means that presumably my answer was important in making a buying decision. So, presumably, if you got it into your head "I really want to sell to Japanese universities" you'd a) research the law b) implement the technical and legal measures you'd need to comply with it and c) prominently say so on your website. Then, the next time someone called you and (having totally failed to read your site in a manner typical of all customers everywhere) asked about the Personal Information Protection Act, you'd have an answer ready to go, so you could get totally humbled by their second question this time.
Repeat a few dozen times and you might actually succeed in making Enterprise Sales.
(Edit: I had misremembered the English name of the law I cited.)
I would be interested in hearing your reasons why the CALL option is "not right". Here are my reasons why it is:
As it stands currently, they will not sell any plans whatsoever to companies with 100+ users. Not a single one. The reason is that when you get to 100+ users you have just won yourself a ticket aboard the USS Enterprise Sales. There are now a few hundred obstacles standing in front of the sale where there weren't when you were selling to a man who routinely invites all his employees over for dinner. If you haven't done Enterprise Sales before, you don't know what these obstacles are yet. So, let the prospective customers who you're going to crash and burn trying to sell to tell you what their objections are.
For example, hypothetically suppose one of my day job's customers was looking for a solution to this, and you took my advice and had them call you. Here's the first question they're going to ask: "What is your policy for compliance with the Personal Information Protection Act?" And the answer presumably sounds like "Umm... let me Google that." Now, let's be honest: you're going to totally crash and burn with that sales call. But you've learned something useful: a) there is a Personal Information Protection Act and b) somebody who was interested enough in my software to pick up the phone/send an email/etc asked about it first, which means that presumably my answer was important in making a buying decision. So, presumably, if you got it into your head "I really want to sell to Japanese universities" you'd a) research the law b) implement the technical and legal measures you'd need to comply with it and c) prominently say so on your website. Then, the next time someone called you and (having totally failed to read your site in a manner typical of all customers everywhere) asked about the Personal Information Protection Act, you'd have an answer ready to go, so you could get totally humbled by their second question this time.
Repeat a few dozen times and you might actually succeed in making Enterprise Sales.
(Edit: I had misremembered the English name of the law I cited.)