

Today, products like make up the bulk of our new users and represent the fastest growing parts of the business. It's probably surprising from the outside, but it's been a long time since we are solely a remote access company. At the same time, we're expanding other efforts – including some that involve the freemium approach – to address our customers' needs. After that, they can choose to purchase a Pro subscription or not.Īs far as the reason, and we've said this elsewhere, the market has matured, and we've made the decision that to best serve our mobile customers, we need to focus our remote access efforts on a modern, premium offering that works across devices, factors in a mix of cloud and local data, etc. And any computer connected to that mobile account is getting upgraded for those 6 months. Specifically, they are getting 6 months of Pro for free. On our blog and elsewhere we've said we're giving them significant discounts and favorable terms.

Update: We received a statement from Craig VerColen, Senior Director of Corporate Communiations at LogMeIn as well:įirst, let me be clear about the impact on Ignition for iOS customers. If you're a current user of the service we'd love to hear your thoughts on the move in the comments below.
#Logmein pro pricing free#
The countdown to the end of LogMeIn Free started this morning. In fact, today, more than 70% of our first-time users are introduced to us via, making it easily our fastest growing product." "Over the years we've expanded our portfolio and applied the freemium model to new growth markets, most notably in the collaboration market where we have freemium offerings for online meetings in, and cloud sync and share, with Cubby. The reality is that the remote access market evolved – today most of us rely on the cloud and mobile devices to get to our stuff and our apps," a spokesperson says. "We introduced LogMeIn (and our freemium model) 10 years ago, and it proved great at disrupting the then early-stage remote access market. In a statement to TechCrunch, the company implied that the move was motivated by the reality that users are increasingly coming to them via their cloud storage options, leaving the freemium model for LogMeIn popular with users, but not driving new clients. While the vast majority of LogMeIn Free users will not be impacted by this change – LogMeIn Free is and will remain free – we wanted to take a minute to explain what is changing, who will be impacted and what, if anything, it will mean for you. I find it amusing how the link to the March Email is online still and referenced: We're making some changes to LogMeIn Free - specifically introducing new volume limits on LogMeIn Free accounts - that will impact a small portion of our user base. This particular user felt betrayed by the company after they promised last March the service would remain free. Annoying, will have to look for an alternative." I'd pay £29 for remote access for 10computers, and none of the other stuff that comes with the pro accounts. Yesterday I had 7 computers for free, now only 2 computers for £29.ĭoesn't feel right. "What a shame! Great service, i'm more than happy to pay for the initial year of £29, but not for 2 computers. It's been fun and I'll miss you, but I guess it's time to move on and give one of the other numerous free alternatives a try." I understand you're a business, so obviously need to make a profit, but I'm not, and for what I use it for. "Maybe it's worth the price for business users, IT solutions, etc, but for a casual personal user, connecting to one home computer in my lunch break. "Moving to Teamviewer, free for personal use!" Many people seem to have made their first, and last, community posts specifically to complain about this issue. Since the changes were announced on LogMeIn's community page this morning more than 56 pages of responses have been posted.

This includes and cubby.Īs you can expect, longtime LogMeIn users are irate, both at the sudden price increase and the abrupt time window provided to decide if they will keep their account. As of right now, the company's other free services will continue. The offer says $49/year, but the fine print says this is an introductory price that's only good for the first year.

Not now Turn on Turned on Turn onįor users of the LogMeIn Free service, the only way to keep your account is to buy a US$49 year-long subscription for two computers. You can disable notifications at any time in your settings menu.
