Pingdom Will Kill Its Free Website Monitoring Plan on February 6 (venturebeat.com) 29
Pingdom, a popular website monitoring and performance management service, will soon stop welcoming non-paying users. In an email sent to users today, Pingdom announced that it will be ending its free tier on February 6. From a report: The move, which has unsurprisingly upset many users, comes five years after Pingdom was acquired by SolarWinds, an Austin, Texas-based firm. In its email, Pingdom said it intends to focus its resources and investment on the next phase of its product development. Founded in 2007, Pingdom attracted over 500,000 users from 200 countries in seven years, before it was acquired. Several major companies, including Google, Spotify, Microsoft, Twitter, Slack, Evernote, Mailchimp, Github, Square, Instagram, and others became its clients.
No surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
SolarWinds really crippled their free version of Kiwi Syslog Server recently too. Would not be at all surprised if it goes away as well.
Left them long ago (Score:5, Insightful)
Disappointed (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't understand the obsession with not offering a limited free product. I liked Pingdom, it has numerous quirks that I would not have over looked if they were asking for me to pay to use.
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I don't understand the obsession with not offering a limited free product. I liked Pingdom, it has numerous quirks that I would not have over looked if they were asking for me to pay to use.
I think it often comes down to shareholder pressure. If your primary view of a business its the bottom line, then the people using the limited free product are just freeloaders....drive them out, remove the overhead of subsidising them, boost bottom line value.
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Private companies still have shareholders. It's just an invite only affair.
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Um, no.
> The move, which has unsurprisingly upset many users, comes five years after Pingdom was acquired by SolarWinds, an Austin, Texas-based firm
> https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/stock/swi
SolarWinds is public.
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The problem with that line of thought for a company like Pingdom is that free service is how you get a significant percentage of your new paying business as well. Many people aren't going to sign up for even $5 a month to monitor a simple site or two, but they'd sign up to a free one. And once they got used to how that monitoring service worked, if their needs changed or their place of employ needed to monitor more robustly, they are far more likely to just go with the paid version of what they are alread
Re: Disappointed (Score:1)
You could offer a free service too, what is stopping you from doing that? Perhaps the void left by Pingdom exiting an unpaid service market will be enough for you to make a profitable business.
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I used a free version to get comfortable with the product and figure it out. Once I understood what I could and could not do, I wanted to commit to using the product in production. I ended up upgrading to an Enterprise license after about 1 year.
If you are not offering a free product, you are just asking me to do pay for everything to test a product. My time is not free either, and you asking for me and my company to commit to an unknown product. You can offer it for free while we try to see if we can g
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The problem with free trials is they're never long enough - a week, a month? Especially something like this where it may not go down for a while.
Maybe the thing is to offer a free month of monitoring at which point unlimited messages or no
Statuscake is still free (Score:2)
Alternatives? (Score:2)
It didn't tie into orion (Score:2)