Movable Type 3 Is Here — Get Your Wallet Out

Six Apart has finally released the long-awaited Movable Type 3.0 (in a Developer's Edition). That's the good news. The bad news? If you're doing anything more than one-author publishing with your MT installation, 3.0 is going to cost you — they've rolled out a new licensing scheme along with the new software. According to their licensing wizard, it looks like I'm gonna have to shell out $149 to get the appropriate license for MT 3.0 to keep doing what I've been doing with 2.661 (run two blogs of my own, plus offer free blog hosting to interested friends).

My first reaction is that if you need a "licensing wizard" to explain how your licensing scheme works, it's too complicated.

My second reaction is that I don't mind paying for Movable Type — hell, I threw $25 to Six Apart as a thank-you for MT a while back — but it would have been nice if they had kept the price for people like me, who are doing non-commercial stuff with MT, under $100. The business licenses for MT 3.0 are much more expensive (up to $600), but for a business that kind of money is chump change, so that doesn't bother me as much. For individuals, though, $149 isn't a small amount of money.

Mena has some explanation of the licensing scheme on her blog, but it only muddies the waters further, at least for me. She says:

With the new licenses going in effect today we will continue our tradition of offering a fully functional free version, there will also be a large variety of paid licenses that come with the structured support that we never felt that we could give our donors enough of.

OK, there's going to be a fully functional free version… except that the free version they're offering now isn't fully functional, it's limited in how many authors and blogs you can have. Is this the "fully functional" version she's referring to? Or is there a different one coming when the "real" 3.0 release (not the developer's edition, which they stress is for hackers and tinkerers) hits?

I'll probably end up paying the $149. I like Movable Type and Six Apart, and I'm not one of these people who has a moral problem with paying hardworking developers for doing good work (and then wonders why the software jobs are all moving to Bangalore). I just wish they had done a better job of communicating that this was coming before today. Communication is key, people!

UPDATE: Tim Appnel has some thoughts on this matter as well:

The delineation between TypePad and MT have become clear with this release — TypePad is for general users wanting to blog and Movable Type is for developers and professional organizations wanting to do more then just weblogging…

Rumor around the MT community is that Six Apart was collecting less then 50 cents (US) for each copy of MT downloaded. That is absurd for a piece of commercial software!

This outcry raises a bigger more important point which is the reason for my post. As a developer and one who makes a living writing code, this reaction to Six Apart's new licensing is really disheartening and on a certain level frustrating to see. I am a firm believer and backer of open source. I've personally released quite a bit of open source code myself and will continue to do so. However this apparent expectation of the vocal part of community that it is their right to have all great works of software at no cost is bothersome. If users don't have the funds or won't pay on principle for my time, effort or talent — how do I eat?

Like I said above, I'm not opposed to paying for good software. I've paid for Trillian, All-Seeing Eye, Media Jukebox, and many other packages before — all of which have free alternatives available.

In all those cases, I chose to pay because these teams are producing something that is (a) significantly better than the free alternatives in some non-trivial way, and (b) priced commensurately with how much better they are.

The uproar over MT's new pricing suggests to me not what Tim thinks — that people won't pay for software — but that Six Apart hasn't done a good job of communicating how MT 3.0 meets (a) and (b). If I'm supposed to pay for it, tell me why it's better than the free alternatives, and convince me that what you're charging is a fair amount to get those benefits.

Outside the circle of beta testers, Six Apart has said practically nothing about 3.0 for months, so it shouldn't surprise them that they fail on (a) — how can anyone be convinced the upgrade is "worth it" if they don't know what's in the upgrade? And as I noted originally, the pricing seems disproportionately high for individual users like me, which fails test (b). In short, if you want to sell software, you have to sell it.

Taking something that used to be free and putting a price tag on it is not selling. Convincing people that it's now worth paying for — that's selling. Six Apart needs to get in gear and start doing that if they don't want people to react like they did to today's announcement.

ANOTHER UPDATE: I think this post over at I, Feelafel hits the nail on the head:

SixApart's obscure licensing scheme betrays its new model of the blogging user base: casual webloggers, hardcore computer h4x0rz, and content management service providers. In a MovableType 3.0 world, it seems that the casual webloggers are being told to use TypePad, the hardcore computer h4x0rz are being given the free copy of MT 3.0 and asked to make some cool new plugins for it, and the content management service providers are being charged for software that allows them to offer innovative services to their clients. It's an attractive model, and I think it's almost right — I just think that there's a large, very vocal, and totally unaccounted-for group that sits between the casual weblogger and the elite h4x0r. It's these people who've advocated MT over its competitors for years, these people who've secured their own web hosting packages so that they could use MT, and these people who've passionately contributed to the MT community forums. Now these people are left with the choice of paying $100 or more to keep running their and their friends weblogs, or subscribing to TypePad. Or, most likely, going back to Blogger and getting everything for free again.

Exactly right — I was just thinking myself earlier that the strongest vibe I was getting from the MT 3.0 release was that Six Apart would really prefer people like me to move to TypePad. I'm not a Movable Type "developer" — I use and enjoy several MT plugins (all hail MT-Blacklist!), but I have no ambitions for writing my own. I do, however, have a strong preference for hosting my own blogs on my own box, rather than jobbing that out to someone else through an ASP-style service like TypePad. (Not to knock TypePad, it's just not for me.) So where does that leave people like me? That would appear to be the question.


Comments

tubedogg

May 13, 2004
9:56 am

I have no problem paying hard-working developers. I donated enough in the past to cover a paid MT3 license for one of my personal sites, even.
The problem I have is these prices are so far off the deep end that I just can’t justify it. One of my sites is a totally non-commercial fansite. We don’t run ads, or affiliate links, or anything. This site runs off of MT 2.x. To upgrade this site to MT 3 I would be looking at at *least* $150, and probably closer to $200 (since their licensing engine runs out before my # of authors/# of blog needs are covered). Where am I going to get $200 from a site that makes no money? And who’s to say that in six months they don’t release a new version that they call a “major” new release and charge another $200 for it? I can’t afford that, nor can I justify it.
It’s interesting to note that they so recently went on record saying that 3.0 would not be the “fabled MT Pro” release. Yet they certainly are trying to charge a crapload more than I think anyone would have expected to pay for MT Pro, and this isn’t even a “feature” release!

Jason Lefkowitz

May 13, 2004
10:06 am

Hey, I feel your pain. At least your previous contributions will be creditable against the upgrade cost (or so Mena says in her post) — so if you’ve given heavily in the past that should help defray the cost somewhat.

tubedogg

May 13, 2004
10:12 am

I gave about $80 which should cover the cost of a license for my one personal site which is me and a friend with one weblog.
I just don’t see how they justify a price of $100 in a case like the above. *shrugs*

Sandy Smith

May 13, 2004
4:51 pm

“In short, if you want to sell software, you have to sell it. Taking something that used to be free and putting a price tag on it is not selling. Convincing people that it’s now worth paying for — that’s selling.”
You will always get detractors, but I think that last comment is insightful. Apple took iLife (iPhoto, iTunes, iMovie, and iDVD) and made it for-pay, except for iTunes. They also added GarageBand, a killer music recording/looping/sequencing app. That sold well. They took .Mac, their free online service, and made it for pay. They didn’t do nearly as good a job selling it, so they initially had a reaction that makes the reaction to MT3 look positively warm. However, they did add features to it and explained that they needed to cover costs. They have lower usage, but it’s still there.
So now that they’ve bungled the first part (adding glorious new stuff and trumpeting that while announcing the non-free-ness), hopefully they can learn from Apple’s (somewhat) recovery on the second.

Ant’s Eye View

May 13, 2004
9:09 pm

Movable Type 3.0 Is Here — Get Your Wallet Out

New version, new licensing

I, Feelafel

May 13, 2004
9:48 pm

If it’s really Movable, move it lower, please

The issue isn’t that MovableType 3.0 will now cost money for anyone who wants to use a single installation to…

Aventuras_de_un_webmaster.blog

May 13, 2004
11:09 pm

Los días de mi blog en MT están contados.

Movable Type 3.0 ya ha salido con nuevas opciones de licenciamiento que no incentiva la actualización. Para manejar mis blogs personales voy a necesitar invertir USD $149.95 en una herramienta que es buena pero que tiene competencia importante en WordP…

mashby

May 14, 2004
5:01 am

Sandy,
I hear what you’re saying, but the price of the software you’re referring to is a LOT less than the new prices for MT.
I think Tubedogg hit the nail on the head. There are a lot of volunteer sites that run on MT and the new limits on authors and weblogs makes the prospect of staying with MT next to impossible. The fact that the cost of MT 3 is so high, I can’t even imagine what MT Pro is going to cost!
Many of us use multiple weblogs to get around quirks within MT, such as lack of complex categories, and even a simple web site can have 5 weblogs easy. That means that they can no longer run the free version.
I just don’t see why there’s such a limit on authors and weblogs. It seems too strict IMNSHO. If I convince a client to spend $800 on a web publishing tool and then they can only have 15 “weblogs”? MT isn’t a full-blown CMS program yet, but with this pricing you’d think it was.
My only hope is that they will loosen up the restrictions and give a little bit more flexibility.

tubedogg

May 14, 2004
6:55 am

mashby said: “The fact that the cost of MT 3 is so high, I can’t even imagine what MT Pro is going to cost!”
You know it’s rather ironic you say that. Yesterday I saw a link to this old comment on ScriptyGoddess from Mena. http://www.scriptygoddess.com/archives/001108.php#3901
In it, she says “Regarding the price of the pay version — no you can’t assume it’s going to be ‘quite above’ $20 -$40. Since we started thinking about a pay version, the price in our minds was always around $45-$55. We don’t publicly state that since we want to always allow for change.”
Granted, this was almost two years ago, and granted, they didn’t have 24 employees then. But the fact that they are now charging double for the cheapest personal license than they thought they were going to charge for the super-fantastic MT Pro, gives an indication of why $100 for 3 authors is just completely overpriced.

Jason Lefkowitz

May 14, 2004
9:39 am

I dunno… I think $150 is a justifiable price for a capable piece of server software. It’s on the high end of “justifiable” but it doesn’t strike me as *completely* ridiculous.
Still, though, strictly from a marketing perspective they would have been wise to keep it under $100 if they possibly could have — having three digits instead of two just automatically makes a number look waaaay bigger. Ronco figured this out years ago (“three easy payments of $99.99!”), I have no idea why Six Apart didn’t.

I, Feelafel

May 14, 2004
2:22 pm

If it’s really Movable, move it lower, please

The issue isn’t that MovableType 3.0 will now cost money for anyone who wants to use a single installation to…

Obnoxious

May 14, 2004
6:31 pm

Wow! Movable Type 3 Costs More, Does Less!

Talk about a firestorm! This week Six Apart released Movable Type 3.0 Developer Edition, along with a new pricing plan which has incurred the ire of hundreds of bloggers using Movable Type. The main problem bloggers have with Movable Type 3.0 is its br…

Obnoxious

May 14, 2004
8:35 pm

The Furor over Movable Type 3

Talk about a firestorm! This week Six Apart released Movable Type 3.0 Developer Edition, along with a new pricing plan which has incurred the ire of hundreds of bloggers using Movable Type. The main problem bloggers have with Movable Type 3.0 is its br…

Ant’s Eye View

May 15, 2004
9:42 am

Six Apart Responds to the MT3 Kerfluffle

… and they’re getting closer, but they haven’t quite nailed it yet

G’Day Mate – Reviews!

May 16, 2004
8:33 pm

Blog Roundup

Here we are back with a new Blog Roundup and for the first time in memory, we actually have a single theme for the week. Every single blog that was randomly selected has been posting about the same thing this…

G’Day Mate – Reviews!

May 16, 2004
8:45 pm

Blog Roundup

Here we are back with a new Blog Roundup and for the first time in memory, we actually have a single theme for the week. Every single blog that was randomly selected has been posting about the same thing this…

fiat lux

May 16, 2004
9:54 pm

Jason, I think you’ve hit one of the nails on the head – the current licensing scheme is basically telling a significant (and very vocal) portion of MT’s current users to take a hike — either over to TypePad or out the door.
I’m not even remotely a hax0r but I like the freedom of being able to do what I want with my own web space, not what TypePad tells me I can do.
I’m waiting for the dust to settle before I decide my next step.

Obnoxious

November 19, 2004
7:46 pm

The Furor over Movable Type 3

Talk about a firestorm! This week Six Apart released Movable Type 3.0 Developer Edition, along with a new pricing plan which has incurred the ire of hundreds of bloggers using Movable Type. The main problem bloggers have with Movable Type 3.0 is its br…

Obnoxious

December 2, 2004
11:29 pm

The Furor over Movable Type 3

Talk about a firestorm! This week Six Apart released Movable Type 3.0 Developer Edition, along with a new pricing plan which has incurred the ire of hundreds of bloggers using Movable Type. The main problem bloggers have with Movable Type 3.0 is its br…