Symantec quietly hikes Norton renewal prices

By Joris Evers
http://news.com.com/Symantec+quietly+hikes+Norton+renewal+prices/2100-7350_3
-5894058.html

Story last modified Wed Oct 12 13:00:00 PDT 2005

Symantec has quietly raised renewal prices for its Norton antivirus and
other products, a move some see as a parting shot before Microsoft enters
the consumer security fray next year.

On Monday, the security software giant raised the prices Norton users pay
for another year of updates to their installed products by as much as 33
percent. The updates include traditional virus signatures and product
enhancements, which are a new feature and part of Symantec's move to a
subscription model.

Cupertino, Calif.-based Symantec announced the 2006 editions of its Norton
products last month. The company at the time published prices for new users
of the products: Norton AntiVirus, Norton Internet Security, Norton System
Works and Norton Personal Firewall. At the time, it did not disclose pricing
for existing users signing up for another year of updates. It activated the
higher prices on Monday, a company representative said.

The price hike could be seen as a "last hurrah" before Microsoft enters the
security arena next year, analysts at Merrill Lynch wrote in a research note
this week. The move could alternatively be "a decisive refusal to be
intimidated by a pending market entry," the analysts wrote.

As Symantec has 40 million subscribers, the price rise could add as much as
$250 million to the company's revenue in its next fiscal year, according to
the Merrill Lynch note.

The price increase is not typical of the competitive consumer security
software market, Forrester Research analyst Maribel Lopez said. "The trend
has always been downward. Consumers would expect pricing to be flat or
down," she said. Nevertheless, people often don't notice prices when
renewing their product, Lopez said.

Microsoft's entry into the market is looming like dark clouds in the
distance, she added. "The biggest issue is going to be whether or not the
bottom drops out of the market when Microsoft enters," she said. "Symantec
is bringing in the money while the getting is good."

Microsoft is readying products to protect computers against worms, viruses,
spyware and other threats. Windows OneCare, its consumer antivirus and
anti-spyware service, has been available to beta testers since July. The
software maker last week said a test version of a product to protect
business computers would be available by year's end.

Symantec's price shift is unrelated to the prospect of competition from
Microsoft, said Laura Garcia-Manrique, a senior director of product
management at the security company. The changes reflect that customers now
get software enhancements in addition to virus signatures, she said.
Previously the product updates were sold separately.

"We've taken a number of actions, including the increase of our subscription
prices...to facilitate our move to a subscription model," Garcia-Manrique
said. Symantec has also cut the upfront price of Norton AntiVirus by $10,
she noted.

"This move on our part is the right move for the market. If Microsoft's
actions in some way change that, then we will have to look at what direction
the market goes," Garcia-Manrique said. Symantec CEO John Thompson on
Tuesday predicted his company will beat Microsoft in the security space.

Some of Symantec's rivals could see the price hike as an opportunity to win
new customers. Computer Associates, for example, charges $29.99 to renew its
Internet Security Suite--a price that includes product updates, a CA
representative said. That compares with $39.99 to renew the Norton Internet
Security suite.

At Trend Micro, renewing its PC-cillin Internet Security costs $24.95. The
company expects to win some Symantec customers to switch. "There is a
disjoint between the consumer expectation and the shift Symantec has made in
their pricing," said Lane Bass, general manager of consumer products at
Trend Micro.

Raising prices could alienate some customers, Patrick Hinojosa, chief
technology officer at security provider Panda Software said. "It does not
seem like a good idea to reward customers who used your product for at least
a year."


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