The Metronome Checkbox for Usage-Based IT Pricing

Bills are checks. In the UK, a restaurant check is known as a receipt and customers ask for it as such, ie. anyone who asks for a ‘check’ (which is itself spelled check) out loud in a burger bar is likely to be asked if they need one. a doctor, a dentist or some other form of clinician.

But bills are also checks in the cerebral sense, e.g. technology billing systems enable us to keep a check on spending, manage the cost of IT solutions that may be overpriced or overburdened to the point of redundancy… and also monitor the amount of shadow (unapproved) IT from central technology command) that users may have purchased and entered into the total technology billing cycle.

Not always the sexist part of the whole tech story, IT billing actually helps us audit software systems from the bottom up and, more importantly, to see if the “pay only for what you need” promise of cloud computing it really appears in reality. world.

Towards usage-based pricing

The logically named San Francisco-based usage-based billing platform company, Metronome wants us to take a more proactive approach to managing technology spend and iterate pricing management faster to gain better control over expenses. Founded by former Dropbox software engineers Kevin Liu and Scott Woody, Metronome provides billing infrastructure that helps organizations move toward the wonderland that is usage-based pricing.

“Metronome transforms billing from a bottleneck to a growth lever. We’ve learned from working with the fastest-growing software companies over the years, and we’ve baked these insights into our 2.0 platform.” said Scott Woody, founder and CEO of Metronome. “Usage-based pricing is becoming the most preferred model today. For many software teams, billing has been a stumbling block as technology vendors release new features that require pricing updates. Usage-based pricing puts even more pressure on billing as pricing must be at the top of product development – ​​requiring pricing to be iterated as soon as products ship.”

Today, says Woody, successful usage-based companies use Metronome to quickly iterate pricing to better align with customer value and set a new standard for best-in-class billing experiences.

Metronome version 2.0 supports self-service models and complex custom-negotiated enterprise contracts. It enables customers to design flexible SQL-based billable metrics without pre-aggregation and efficiently differentiate pricing using a dimensional structure. Metronome 2.0 enables companies to customize billing dashboards within the product to provide real-time clarity on usage and spend. It gives end customers control over spending with personalized alerts and configurable limits.

Change is a constant

“In pricing, change is the only constant – whether an organization is launching new products, battling competitors, or moving from product-led growth to sales-led growth. Firms must continually and iteratively find the right pricing model to fit a product,” Woody said. “The fundamental challenge with any usage-based pricing is that customers want predictability in their spending. The fascinating thing about The thing about usage-based pricing is that a business gets such a direct alignment between usage and value: basically, any team can become a ‘customer success’ team. We’ve built Metronome as a data platform for it provide continuous, real-time insight into customer usage and spending so that work teams can make quick strategic decisions.”

OpenAI implemented this technology in early 2022, before ChatGPT, to replace a manual in-house billing solution. It has automated key billing workflows, accelerated its speed to launch new products and manage pricing. Metronome today supports OpenAI’s business API platform, powering billing for users and enterprises.

The dream of usage-billing

We’ve talked about the dream of usage-based pricing before, but large technology vendors (take an ERP or CRM implementation as a good example) are unlikely to start telling customers “well, here’s the list of prices, but if you don’t use them all we’ll charge you less” because a) those types of strictly billed deals are only possible in tightly coordinated delivery cycles where usage patterns are extremely standardized and not are likely to go up or down… and b) the IT industry and the world just doesn’t work that way.

What Metronome is doing can be argued to be timely, smart and financially savvy; it can even provide an additional step forward in terms of waste reduction and sustainability for ESG technology initiatives. Here we are then, so time to ask for the bill, or would you like to order desert sir/ma’am?