How to inform my boss about the cheap availability of a software which I think very useful for our department?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;







up vote
2
down vote

favorite












There is software X, which is not a really well-known software, but it is unique and I find it very useful for our task in our department.



I've downloaded a trial version of the software and I have shown it him. He seemed satisfied, but did nothing.



The per-workstation (or per-user) license of the software is slightly below $100 (although they have a per-company license as well, which is many thousands of $).



I wrote him a mail, around so:




Subj: FYI



There is this tool which is very useful for our tasks about ... and
...



Regards,




His answer was essentially this:




This is not a free [as in beer - M.S.] software, so delete it from
your workstation!




I did it so, I deleted even the trial version even on the spot and answered this to him.



Now I think, maybe he doesn't know that next to the per-company license (which he probably won't invest for a simple department), there is also a per-workstation license which is far below the typical budget limits of a whole programming department (i.e. its price is around our daily wage).



I think I should write him a next mail, simply this:




Subject: FYI #2



Hallo,



Do you know, the per-workstation (or per-user) license of the ... is
priced only around $80, and it can be buyed even from a VAT-capable
reseller in our country (link #1, link #2)?



Regards,




...but, if I write this to him, maybe he will think I try to command or control him. I think it is a very high danger, because he is the boss and not me.



I think the software would be very useful, but from the other side, it absolutely not deserves the risk that maybe he think I want to enforce anything for him.



There is also another problem: the department lived without this software since years. If we now buy this software, it would be like admitting that we worked on a highly ineffective way years long. Maybe it can be also a problem, even from the side of the boss, or from the side of my collegues (most of them are working much longer here, as me, and they are also much older, and they are also native in this country while I am a foreigner).



What to do? Is it better to let this as it is, or maybe there is a super-polite version of this "FYI #2" mail, which very clearly avoids that it would be seem as a try to control?







share|improve this question





















  • is this licence a one off payment, or is it $80 a year? What is your position/seniority at the company?
    – Kilisi
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:01










  • Is the "free" software a political stand ? (i.e. FSF vs. Commercial) ? Is there an OpenSource version of that software ?
    – Max
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:32






  • 1




    see stackoverflow.com/questions/2298308/business-case-for-resharper for additional ideas.
    – mcknz
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:59










  • @Kilisi New, young member. :-) It is one off. Pro workstation license around 80, or pro user also around 80. The pro company license is only very costly, many thousands $.
    – Gray Sheep
    Apr 19 '16 at 0:27






  • 2




    Sounds like he has a policy of not using outside software that has any restrictions or costs $$. You don't have the seniority (in my opinion) to go against this.
    – Kilisi
    Apr 19 '16 at 0:31
















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












There is software X, which is not a really well-known software, but it is unique and I find it very useful for our task in our department.



I've downloaded a trial version of the software and I have shown it him. He seemed satisfied, but did nothing.



The per-workstation (or per-user) license of the software is slightly below $100 (although they have a per-company license as well, which is many thousands of $).



I wrote him a mail, around so:




Subj: FYI



There is this tool which is very useful for our tasks about ... and
...



Regards,




His answer was essentially this:




This is not a free [as in beer - M.S.] software, so delete it from
your workstation!




I did it so, I deleted even the trial version even on the spot and answered this to him.



Now I think, maybe he doesn't know that next to the per-company license (which he probably won't invest for a simple department), there is also a per-workstation license which is far below the typical budget limits of a whole programming department (i.e. its price is around our daily wage).



I think I should write him a next mail, simply this:




Subject: FYI #2



Hallo,



Do you know, the per-workstation (or per-user) license of the ... is
priced only around $80, and it can be buyed even from a VAT-capable
reseller in our country (link #1, link #2)?



Regards,




...but, if I write this to him, maybe he will think I try to command or control him. I think it is a very high danger, because he is the boss and not me.



I think the software would be very useful, but from the other side, it absolutely not deserves the risk that maybe he think I want to enforce anything for him.



There is also another problem: the department lived without this software since years. If we now buy this software, it would be like admitting that we worked on a highly ineffective way years long. Maybe it can be also a problem, even from the side of the boss, or from the side of my collegues (most of them are working much longer here, as me, and they are also much older, and they are also native in this country while I am a foreigner).



What to do? Is it better to let this as it is, or maybe there is a super-polite version of this "FYI #2" mail, which very clearly avoids that it would be seem as a try to control?







share|improve this question





















  • is this licence a one off payment, or is it $80 a year? What is your position/seniority at the company?
    – Kilisi
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:01










  • Is the "free" software a political stand ? (i.e. FSF vs. Commercial) ? Is there an OpenSource version of that software ?
    – Max
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:32






  • 1




    see stackoverflow.com/questions/2298308/business-case-for-resharper for additional ideas.
    – mcknz
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:59










  • @Kilisi New, young member. :-) It is one off. Pro workstation license around 80, or pro user also around 80. The pro company license is only very costly, many thousands $.
    – Gray Sheep
    Apr 19 '16 at 0:27






  • 2




    Sounds like he has a policy of not using outside software that has any restrictions or costs $$. You don't have the seniority (in my opinion) to go against this.
    – Kilisi
    Apr 19 '16 at 0:31












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











There is software X, which is not a really well-known software, but it is unique and I find it very useful for our task in our department.



I've downloaded a trial version of the software and I have shown it him. He seemed satisfied, but did nothing.



The per-workstation (or per-user) license of the software is slightly below $100 (although they have a per-company license as well, which is many thousands of $).



I wrote him a mail, around so:




Subj: FYI



There is this tool which is very useful for our tasks about ... and
...



Regards,




His answer was essentially this:




This is not a free [as in beer - M.S.] software, so delete it from
your workstation!




I did it so, I deleted even the trial version even on the spot and answered this to him.



Now I think, maybe he doesn't know that next to the per-company license (which he probably won't invest for a simple department), there is also a per-workstation license which is far below the typical budget limits of a whole programming department (i.e. its price is around our daily wage).



I think I should write him a next mail, simply this:




Subject: FYI #2



Hallo,



Do you know, the per-workstation (or per-user) license of the ... is
priced only around $80, and it can be buyed even from a VAT-capable
reseller in our country (link #1, link #2)?



Regards,




...but, if I write this to him, maybe he will think I try to command or control him. I think it is a very high danger, because he is the boss and not me.



I think the software would be very useful, but from the other side, it absolutely not deserves the risk that maybe he think I want to enforce anything for him.



There is also another problem: the department lived without this software since years. If we now buy this software, it would be like admitting that we worked on a highly ineffective way years long. Maybe it can be also a problem, even from the side of the boss, or from the side of my collegues (most of them are working much longer here, as me, and they are also much older, and they are also native in this country while I am a foreigner).



What to do? Is it better to let this as it is, or maybe there is a super-polite version of this "FYI #2" mail, which very clearly avoids that it would be seem as a try to control?







share|improve this question













There is software X, which is not a really well-known software, but it is unique and I find it very useful for our task in our department.



I've downloaded a trial version of the software and I have shown it him. He seemed satisfied, but did nothing.



The per-workstation (or per-user) license of the software is slightly below $100 (although they have a per-company license as well, which is many thousands of $).



I wrote him a mail, around so:




Subj: FYI



There is this tool which is very useful for our tasks about ... and
...



Regards,




His answer was essentially this:




This is not a free [as in beer - M.S.] software, so delete it from
your workstation!




I did it so, I deleted even the trial version even on the spot and answered this to him.



Now I think, maybe he doesn't know that next to the per-company license (which he probably won't invest for a simple department), there is also a per-workstation license which is far below the typical budget limits of a whole programming department (i.e. its price is around our daily wage).



I think I should write him a next mail, simply this:




Subject: FYI #2



Hallo,



Do you know, the per-workstation (or per-user) license of the ... is
priced only around $80, and it can be buyed even from a VAT-capable
reseller in our country (link #1, link #2)?



Regards,




...but, if I write this to him, maybe he will think I try to command or control him. I think it is a very high danger, because he is the boss and not me.



I think the software would be very useful, but from the other side, it absolutely not deserves the risk that maybe he think I want to enforce anything for him.



There is also another problem: the department lived without this software since years. If we now buy this software, it would be like admitting that we worked on a highly ineffective way years long. Maybe it can be also a problem, even from the side of the boss, or from the side of my collegues (most of them are working much longer here, as me, and they are also much older, and they are also native in this country while I am a foreigner).



What to do? Is it better to let this as it is, or maybe there is a super-polite version of this "FYI #2" mail, which very clearly avoids that it would be seem as a try to control?









share|improve this question












share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 8 '16 at 19:49









Mawg

2,8881927




2,8881927









asked Apr 18 '16 at 15:30









Gray Sheep

1,0771921




1,0771921











  • is this licence a one off payment, or is it $80 a year? What is your position/seniority at the company?
    – Kilisi
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:01










  • Is the "free" software a political stand ? (i.e. FSF vs. Commercial) ? Is there an OpenSource version of that software ?
    – Max
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:32






  • 1




    see stackoverflow.com/questions/2298308/business-case-for-resharper for additional ideas.
    – mcknz
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:59










  • @Kilisi New, young member. :-) It is one off. Pro workstation license around 80, or pro user also around 80. The pro company license is only very costly, many thousands $.
    – Gray Sheep
    Apr 19 '16 at 0:27






  • 2




    Sounds like he has a policy of not using outside software that has any restrictions or costs $$. You don't have the seniority (in my opinion) to go against this.
    – Kilisi
    Apr 19 '16 at 0:31
















  • is this licence a one off payment, or is it $80 a year? What is your position/seniority at the company?
    – Kilisi
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:01










  • Is the "free" software a political stand ? (i.e. FSF vs. Commercial) ? Is there an OpenSource version of that software ?
    – Max
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:32






  • 1




    see stackoverflow.com/questions/2298308/business-case-for-resharper for additional ideas.
    – mcknz
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:59










  • @Kilisi New, young member. :-) It is one off. Pro workstation license around 80, or pro user also around 80. The pro company license is only very costly, many thousands $.
    – Gray Sheep
    Apr 19 '16 at 0:27






  • 2




    Sounds like he has a policy of not using outside software that has any restrictions or costs $$. You don't have the seniority (in my opinion) to go against this.
    – Kilisi
    Apr 19 '16 at 0:31















is this licence a one off payment, or is it $80 a year? What is your position/seniority at the company?
– Kilisi
Apr 18 '16 at 16:01




is this licence a one off payment, or is it $80 a year? What is your position/seniority at the company?
– Kilisi
Apr 18 '16 at 16:01












Is the "free" software a political stand ? (i.e. FSF vs. Commercial) ? Is there an OpenSource version of that software ?
– Max
Apr 18 '16 at 16:32




Is the "free" software a political stand ? (i.e. FSF vs. Commercial) ? Is there an OpenSource version of that software ?
– Max
Apr 18 '16 at 16:32




1




1




see stackoverflow.com/questions/2298308/business-case-for-resharper for additional ideas.
– mcknz
Apr 18 '16 at 16:59




see stackoverflow.com/questions/2298308/business-case-for-resharper for additional ideas.
– mcknz
Apr 18 '16 at 16:59












@Kilisi New, young member. :-) It is one off. Pro workstation license around 80, or pro user also around 80. The pro company license is only very costly, many thousands $.
– Gray Sheep
Apr 19 '16 at 0:27




@Kilisi New, young member. :-) It is one off. Pro workstation license around 80, or pro user also around 80. The pro company license is only very costly, many thousands $.
– Gray Sheep
Apr 19 '16 at 0:27




2




2




Sounds like he has a policy of not using outside software that has any restrictions or costs $$. You don't have the seniority (in my opinion) to go against this.
– Kilisi
Apr 19 '16 at 0:31




Sounds like he has a policy of not using outside software that has any restrictions or costs $$. You don't have the seniority (in my opinion) to go against this.
– Kilisi
Apr 19 '16 at 0:31










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
12
down vote



accepted










Your boss is not interested in this software. He is interested in your productivity. And you have in no way given him anything to think about.



Right now, the software would produce costs. Full stop. End of story.



So why would he be interested in this software?



You need to present him a business case where this software actually has an advantage. This advantage might be obvious to you, but it's not to him.



Write up why this software would be worth using. If you do procedure X twice a week for an hour and that software helps you doing it in half an hour, that is one hour gained per week. That's about 50 hours per year. If the license is 80$ per year, that's 50 hours for 80$. That's pretty cheap. That's something he gets for the 80$. This is what you need to present: what he gets from doing it.



If you do it by mail or personally is a matter of style. Sometimes, tables and calculations are better provided on paper or email rather then verbally. What matters is that you can produce these numbers. Show him what he gains.






share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    In addition there may be unseen internal costs and work involved for the manager, if it's a domain then admin may need to get involved playing with firewalls and security, the manager may need to seek approval from elsewhere etc,. plus of course the section budget angle, all for something they've never needed before.
    – Kilisi
    Apr 18 '16 at 16:37










  • I feel as if he would communicate to me in your account :-)
    – Gray Sheep
    Apr 19 '16 at 7:32










  • One problem with adding tools is it needs support. If the tool stops working, people become stupid, and they also stop working, even though they used to be able to do said work without the tool before.
    – Nelson
    Nov 9 '16 at 8:09











  • Isn't that obvious that this software would raise productivity? Does OP really needs to present a dissertation to his boss?
    – SpongeBob
    Feb 23 '17 at 21:40










  • @Fernando If it were obvious to his boss, they would have used said software for years. And a 10 sentence email is hardly a dissertation.
    – nvoigt
    Feb 24 '17 at 8:04

















up vote
8
down vote













This is the sort of thing that should be brought up face to face with your boss in private. When the opportunity presents itself say something like "Regarding software X, I was surprised that the department wouldn't be interested given the per workstation license is $80. It should pay for itself in time savings quite quickly." This allows for the boss to admit not fully reading the costs or that the current tool is politically entrenched or that they are in the process of negotiating a company wide license or... whatever the reality is provided they are willing to share it with you.



Email runs risk of tone being misread so face to face is much better.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    Confusing

    You showed him the software but then you had inform him "there is a tool"?

    You installed a commercial version in addition to the trial version?

    If you installed a non paid commercial version then your boss should be upset.

    Even trial license may not be good for production use.

    You should have informed him up front you wanted to do an eval.



    Maybe just let it go unless he gets back to you or try something like this




    Confirming I deleted the software



    It would aid in the following: a) ... b) ...



    Cost / time saving estimate ...



    Cost is $/workstation or $ for site license



    Web site



    Please consider purchasing the software







    share|improve this answer





















      Your Answer







      StackExchange.ready(function()
      var channelOptions =
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "423"
      ;
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
      createEditor();
      );

      else
      createEditor();

      );

      function createEditor()
      StackExchange.prepareEditor(
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      convertImagesToLinks: false,
      noModals: false,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: null,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      noCode: true, onDemand: false,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      );



      );








       

      draft saved


      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function ()
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f65394%2fhow-to-inform-my-boss-about-the-cheap-availability-of-a-software-which-i-think-v%23new-answer', 'question_page');

      );

      Post as a guest

























      StackExchange.ready(function ()
      $("#show-editor-button input, #show-editor-button button").click(function ()
      var showEditor = function()
      $("#show-editor-button").hide();
      $("#post-form").removeClass("dno");
      StackExchange.editor.finallyInit();
      ;

      var useFancy = $(this).data('confirm-use-fancy');
      if(useFancy == 'True')
      var popupTitle = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-title');
      var popupBody = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-body');
      var popupAccept = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-accept-button');

      $(this).loadPopup(
      url: '/post/self-answer-popup',
      loaded: function(popup)
      var pTitle = $(popup).find('h2');
      var pBody = $(popup).find('.popup-body');
      var pSubmit = $(popup).find('.popup-submit');

      pTitle.text(popupTitle);
      pBody.html(popupBody);
      pSubmit.val(popupAccept).click(showEditor);

      )
      else
      var confirmText = $(this).data('confirm-text');
      if (confirmText ? confirm(confirmText) : true)
      showEditor();


      );
      );






      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      12
      down vote



      accepted










      Your boss is not interested in this software. He is interested in your productivity. And you have in no way given him anything to think about.



      Right now, the software would produce costs. Full stop. End of story.



      So why would he be interested in this software?



      You need to present him a business case where this software actually has an advantage. This advantage might be obvious to you, but it's not to him.



      Write up why this software would be worth using. If you do procedure X twice a week for an hour and that software helps you doing it in half an hour, that is one hour gained per week. That's about 50 hours per year. If the license is 80$ per year, that's 50 hours for 80$. That's pretty cheap. That's something he gets for the 80$. This is what you need to present: what he gets from doing it.



      If you do it by mail or personally is a matter of style. Sometimes, tables and calculations are better provided on paper or email rather then verbally. What matters is that you can produce these numbers. Show him what he gains.






      share|improve this answer

















      • 2




        In addition there may be unseen internal costs and work involved for the manager, if it's a domain then admin may need to get involved playing with firewalls and security, the manager may need to seek approval from elsewhere etc,. plus of course the section budget angle, all for something they've never needed before.
        – Kilisi
        Apr 18 '16 at 16:37










      • I feel as if he would communicate to me in your account :-)
        – Gray Sheep
        Apr 19 '16 at 7:32










      • One problem with adding tools is it needs support. If the tool stops working, people become stupid, and they also stop working, even though they used to be able to do said work without the tool before.
        – Nelson
        Nov 9 '16 at 8:09











      • Isn't that obvious that this software would raise productivity? Does OP really needs to present a dissertation to his boss?
        – SpongeBob
        Feb 23 '17 at 21:40










      • @Fernando If it were obvious to his boss, they would have used said software for years. And a 10 sentence email is hardly a dissertation.
        – nvoigt
        Feb 24 '17 at 8:04














      up vote
      12
      down vote



      accepted










      Your boss is not interested in this software. He is interested in your productivity. And you have in no way given him anything to think about.



      Right now, the software would produce costs. Full stop. End of story.



      So why would he be interested in this software?



      You need to present him a business case where this software actually has an advantage. This advantage might be obvious to you, but it's not to him.



      Write up why this software would be worth using. If you do procedure X twice a week for an hour and that software helps you doing it in half an hour, that is one hour gained per week. That's about 50 hours per year. If the license is 80$ per year, that's 50 hours for 80$. That's pretty cheap. That's something he gets for the 80$. This is what you need to present: what he gets from doing it.



      If you do it by mail or personally is a matter of style. Sometimes, tables and calculations are better provided on paper or email rather then verbally. What matters is that you can produce these numbers. Show him what he gains.






      share|improve this answer

















      • 2




        In addition there may be unseen internal costs and work involved for the manager, if it's a domain then admin may need to get involved playing with firewalls and security, the manager may need to seek approval from elsewhere etc,. plus of course the section budget angle, all for something they've never needed before.
        – Kilisi
        Apr 18 '16 at 16:37










      • I feel as if he would communicate to me in your account :-)
        – Gray Sheep
        Apr 19 '16 at 7:32










      • One problem with adding tools is it needs support. If the tool stops working, people become stupid, and they also stop working, even though they used to be able to do said work without the tool before.
        – Nelson
        Nov 9 '16 at 8:09











      • Isn't that obvious that this software would raise productivity? Does OP really needs to present a dissertation to his boss?
        – SpongeBob
        Feb 23 '17 at 21:40










      • @Fernando If it were obvious to his boss, they would have used said software for years. And a 10 sentence email is hardly a dissertation.
        – nvoigt
        Feb 24 '17 at 8:04












      up vote
      12
      down vote



      accepted







      up vote
      12
      down vote



      accepted






      Your boss is not interested in this software. He is interested in your productivity. And you have in no way given him anything to think about.



      Right now, the software would produce costs. Full stop. End of story.



      So why would he be interested in this software?



      You need to present him a business case where this software actually has an advantage. This advantage might be obvious to you, but it's not to him.



      Write up why this software would be worth using. If you do procedure X twice a week for an hour and that software helps you doing it in half an hour, that is one hour gained per week. That's about 50 hours per year. If the license is 80$ per year, that's 50 hours for 80$. That's pretty cheap. That's something he gets for the 80$. This is what you need to present: what he gets from doing it.



      If you do it by mail or personally is a matter of style. Sometimes, tables and calculations are better provided on paper or email rather then verbally. What matters is that you can produce these numbers. Show him what he gains.






      share|improve this answer













      Your boss is not interested in this software. He is interested in your productivity. And you have in no way given him anything to think about.



      Right now, the software would produce costs. Full stop. End of story.



      So why would he be interested in this software?



      You need to present him a business case where this software actually has an advantage. This advantage might be obvious to you, but it's not to him.



      Write up why this software would be worth using. If you do procedure X twice a week for an hour and that software helps you doing it in half an hour, that is one hour gained per week. That's about 50 hours per year. If the license is 80$ per year, that's 50 hours for 80$. That's pretty cheap. That's something he gets for the 80$. This is what you need to present: what he gets from doing it.



      If you do it by mail or personally is a matter of style. Sometimes, tables and calculations are better provided on paper or email rather then verbally. What matters is that you can produce these numbers. Show him what he gains.







      share|improve this answer













      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer











      answered Apr 18 '16 at 16:07









      nvoigt

      42.4k18104146




      42.4k18104146







      • 2




        In addition there may be unseen internal costs and work involved for the manager, if it's a domain then admin may need to get involved playing with firewalls and security, the manager may need to seek approval from elsewhere etc,. plus of course the section budget angle, all for something they've never needed before.
        – Kilisi
        Apr 18 '16 at 16:37










      • I feel as if he would communicate to me in your account :-)
        – Gray Sheep
        Apr 19 '16 at 7:32










      • One problem with adding tools is it needs support. If the tool stops working, people become stupid, and they also stop working, even though they used to be able to do said work without the tool before.
        – Nelson
        Nov 9 '16 at 8:09











      • Isn't that obvious that this software would raise productivity? Does OP really needs to present a dissertation to his boss?
        – SpongeBob
        Feb 23 '17 at 21:40










      • @Fernando If it were obvious to his boss, they would have used said software for years. And a 10 sentence email is hardly a dissertation.
        – nvoigt
        Feb 24 '17 at 8:04












      • 2




        In addition there may be unseen internal costs and work involved for the manager, if it's a domain then admin may need to get involved playing with firewalls and security, the manager may need to seek approval from elsewhere etc,. plus of course the section budget angle, all for something they've never needed before.
        – Kilisi
        Apr 18 '16 at 16:37










      • I feel as if he would communicate to me in your account :-)
        – Gray Sheep
        Apr 19 '16 at 7:32










      • One problem with adding tools is it needs support. If the tool stops working, people become stupid, and they also stop working, even though they used to be able to do said work without the tool before.
        – Nelson
        Nov 9 '16 at 8:09











      • Isn't that obvious that this software would raise productivity? Does OP really needs to present a dissertation to his boss?
        – SpongeBob
        Feb 23 '17 at 21:40










      • @Fernando If it were obvious to his boss, they would have used said software for years. And a 10 sentence email is hardly a dissertation.
        – nvoigt
        Feb 24 '17 at 8:04







      2




      2




      In addition there may be unseen internal costs and work involved for the manager, if it's a domain then admin may need to get involved playing with firewalls and security, the manager may need to seek approval from elsewhere etc,. plus of course the section budget angle, all for something they've never needed before.
      – Kilisi
      Apr 18 '16 at 16:37




      In addition there may be unseen internal costs and work involved for the manager, if it's a domain then admin may need to get involved playing with firewalls and security, the manager may need to seek approval from elsewhere etc,. plus of course the section budget angle, all for something they've never needed before.
      – Kilisi
      Apr 18 '16 at 16:37












      I feel as if he would communicate to me in your account :-)
      – Gray Sheep
      Apr 19 '16 at 7:32




      I feel as if he would communicate to me in your account :-)
      – Gray Sheep
      Apr 19 '16 at 7:32












      One problem with adding tools is it needs support. If the tool stops working, people become stupid, and they also stop working, even though they used to be able to do said work without the tool before.
      – Nelson
      Nov 9 '16 at 8:09





      One problem with adding tools is it needs support. If the tool stops working, people become stupid, and they also stop working, even though they used to be able to do said work without the tool before.
      – Nelson
      Nov 9 '16 at 8:09













      Isn't that obvious that this software would raise productivity? Does OP really needs to present a dissertation to his boss?
      – SpongeBob
      Feb 23 '17 at 21:40




      Isn't that obvious that this software would raise productivity? Does OP really needs to present a dissertation to his boss?
      – SpongeBob
      Feb 23 '17 at 21:40












      @Fernando If it were obvious to his boss, they would have used said software for years. And a 10 sentence email is hardly a dissertation.
      – nvoigt
      Feb 24 '17 at 8:04




      @Fernando If it were obvious to his boss, they would have used said software for years. And a 10 sentence email is hardly a dissertation.
      – nvoigt
      Feb 24 '17 at 8:04












      up vote
      8
      down vote













      This is the sort of thing that should be brought up face to face with your boss in private. When the opportunity presents itself say something like "Regarding software X, I was surprised that the department wouldn't be interested given the per workstation license is $80. It should pay for itself in time savings quite quickly." This allows for the boss to admit not fully reading the costs or that the current tool is politically entrenched or that they are in the process of negotiating a company wide license or... whatever the reality is provided they are willing to share it with you.



      Email runs risk of tone being misread so face to face is much better.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        8
        down vote













        This is the sort of thing that should be brought up face to face with your boss in private. When the opportunity presents itself say something like "Regarding software X, I was surprised that the department wouldn't be interested given the per workstation license is $80. It should pay for itself in time savings quite quickly." This allows for the boss to admit not fully reading the costs or that the current tool is politically entrenched or that they are in the process of negotiating a company wide license or... whatever the reality is provided they are willing to share it with you.



        Email runs risk of tone being misread so face to face is much better.






        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          8
          down vote










          up vote
          8
          down vote









          This is the sort of thing that should be brought up face to face with your boss in private. When the opportunity presents itself say something like "Regarding software X, I was surprised that the department wouldn't be interested given the per workstation license is $80. It should pay for itself in time savings quite quickly." This allows for the boss to admit not fully reading the costs or that the current tool is politically entrenched or that they are in the process of negotiating a company wide license or... whatever the reality is provided they are willing to share it with you.



          Email runs risk of tone being misread so face to face is much better.






          share|improve this answer













          This is the sort of thing that should be brought up face to face with your boss in private. When the opportunity presents itself say something like "Regarding software X, I was surprised that the department wouldn't be interested given the per workstation license is $80. It should pay for itself in time savings quite quickly." This allows for the boss to admit not fully reading the costs or that the current tool is politically entrenched or that they are in the process of negotiating a company wide license or... whatever the reality is provided they are willing to share it with you.



          Email runs risk of tone being misread so face to face is much better.







          share|improve this answer













          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer











          answered Apr 18 '16 at 15:40









          Myles

          25.4k658104




          25.4k658104




















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              Confusing

              You showed him the software but then you had inform him "there is a tool"?

              You installed a commercial version in addition to the trial version?

              If you installed a non paid commercial version then your boss should be upset.

              Even trial license may not be good for production use.

              You should have informed him up front you wanted to do an eval.



              Maybe just let it go unless he gets back to you or try something like this




              Confirming I deleted the software



              It would aid in the following: a) ... b) ...



              Cost / time saving estimate ...



              Cost is $/workstation or $ for site license



              Web site



              Please consider purchasing the software







              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                Confusing

                You showed him the software but then you had inform him "there is a tool"?

                You installed a commercial version in addition to the trial version?

                If you installed a non paid commercial version then your boss should be upset.

                Even trial license may not be good for production use.

                You should have informed him up front you wanted to do an eval.



                Maybe just let it go unless he gets back to you or try something like this




                Confirming I deleted the software



                It would aid in the following: a) ... b) ...



                Cost / time saving estimate ...



                Cost is $/workstation or $ for site license



                Web site



                Please consider purchasing the software







                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  Confusing

                  You showed him the software but then you had inform him "there is a tool"?

                  You installed a commercial version in addition to the trial version?

                  If you installed a non paid commercial version then your boss should be upset.

                  Even trial license may not be good for production use.

                  You should have informed him up front you wanted to do an eval.



                  Maybe just let it go unless he gets back to you or try something like this




                  Confirming I deleted the software



                  It would aid in the following: a) ... b) ...



                  Cost / time saving estimate ...



                  Cost is $/workstation or $ for site license



                  Web site



                  Please consider purchasing the software







                  share|improve this answer













                  Confusing

                  You showed him the software but then you had inform him "there is a tool"?

                  You installed a commercial version in addition to the trial version?

                  If you installed a non paid commercial version then your boss should be upset.

                  Even trial license may not be good for production use.

                  You should have informed him up front you wanted to do an eval.



                  Maybe just let it go unless he gets back to you or try something like this




                  Confirming I deleted the software



                  It would aid in the following: a) ... b) ...



                  Cost / time saving estimate ...



                  Cost is $/workstation or $ for site license



                  Web site



                  Please consider purchasing the software








                  share|improve this answer













                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer











                  answered Apr 18 '16 at 15:46









                  paparazzo

                  33.3k657106




                  33.3k657106






















                       

                      draft saved


                      draft discarded


























                       


                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function ()
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f65394%2fhow-to-inform-my-boss-about-the-cheap-availability-of-a-software-which-i-think-v%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                      );

                      Post as a guest

















































































                      Comments

                      Popular posts from this blog

                      What does second last employer means? [closed]

                      List of Gilmore Girls characters

                      Confectionery