Headline software prices have been flattening for years, and vendors will tell you that's competition working in your favor. Some of it is. But margin doesn't vanish because a sticker price dropped — it relocates. And the place it's been relocating to is the set of meters you don't watch: storage, AI credits, API calls, contact counts, automation runs. The overage didn't disappear. It moved somewhere you're less likely to look.
Why metered extras are the perfect hiding place.
A per-seat price is at least visible — you know how many seats you have. A storage meter is invisible by design. It ticks up silently as your team does exactly what the product is for: uploading files, generating documents, running automations. You don't feel it until the email arrives saying you've exceeded your plan, at which point the cost is already incurred and the upgrade is the only exit.
A price you negotiate once is honest. A meter that bills you for breathing is not — it just looks like it on the invoice.
The meters worth watching.
Not all meters are dishonest — usage-based pricing for genuinely variable costs is fair, and we use it where it makes sense. The trick is telling the fair meters from the trap meters. The fair ones price something that genuinely costs the vendor money and scales with your success. The trap meters price something that costs the vendor almost nothing and exists mainly to convert flat customers into climbing ones.
- Storage — costs the vendor cents per gigabyte; often priced like it's precious.
- AI credits — real cost, but watch the markup and the expiry games.
- API calls — pure gatekeeping when metered tightly; the data is yours.
- Contacts / records — the list-size ceiling, dressed as a meter.
- Automation runs — billing you per task the product exists to automate.
How to shop with the meters in view.
When you evaluate a tool, don't just compare headline prices — find every meter and ask two questions: does this meter price a real, variable cost, and is the included allowance generous enough that I'll rarely hit it? A low headline price with a stingy storage cap is often more expensive in year two than a higher price with room to breathe. The sticker is the bait; the meters are the bill.
Flattening prices are good news only if you watch where the margin went. It went into the meters. See them before they see you, and the honest products get a lot easier to tell apart from the ones that just moved the overage where you wouldn't look.