Office 365 Buy Outright

broken image


Apps and pricing. Office 365, whether Personal, Home, or University, is a subscription-based. Office 365 Home gives each user up to 1TB of OneDrive cloud storage so you can co-create, save and access almost anything anywhere. Martin Theory Instructor. Having so many tools at his fingertips makes the world of difference to Martin, whether it's going over the basics using PowerPoint or Inking through his essential kit list.

Microsoft Office is the staple software of modern home computing. Got a PC? Then you need to buy Microsoft Office to get Word, Excel and PowerPoint, right?

That used to be the case.

Can You Buy Word Outright

  • Home / can i buy microsoft office 365 outright? Help – Fixing Common Microsoft Office Problems. March 28, 2020; IT Guy; Hints and Tips; Self Help Guide to Fixing Common Microsoft Office Problems including Microsoft Outlook, Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel Before bringing your Microsoft Office problems to us, there are a few fixes we.
  • When you buy your Office 365 subscription from My Choice Software, you can take advantage of volume discounts and no sales tax outside California. Check out the Office 365 comparison chart to compare between different 365 editions. Full installed Office applications. Always have the latest, full installed versions of popular Office applications.

Despite shifting focus to Microsoft 365, which used to be called Office 365, Microsoft still sells Office Home & Student 2019 for a one-time charge of $149.99. This includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint.

Nowadays, millions of people have ditched Office for the free Google suite of Docs, Sheets and Slides and embraced cloud computing. But for some, the comfort and familiarity of Microsoft's productivity software is too much to give up and besides, Microsoft offers cloud storage too.

It used to be simple: buy a computer, then buy a CD-ROM loaded with Office. An easy, one-off payment and the software was yours forever (or until your PC gave up). If you want to, you can still do it this way via a one-time download (RIP CD-ROMs).

But Office 365 is the way Microsoft wants you to buy into Office – as a monthly or annual subscription payment that embraces the convenience of cloud storage and services across your multiple devices.

Here, we take a look at what Office 365 gives you and if it's worth investing in over buying Office outright.

What devices does Microsoft Office 365 work on?

Office 365 is compatible with any modern PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, Android phone or Android tablet (check exact requirements here).

Read moreBest Australian Black Friday Microsoft Store deals

Can I Buy Excel Outright

How much is Microsoft Office 365 in Australia?

There are two tiers of the Office 365 subscription: Home or Personal. There's not much of a price difference between the two but go for Personal if you only need Office for yourself. For a little more, Home lets you share the benefits with up to six people so is ideal for families.

The annual costs saves you money compared to paying monthly, but the monthly subscription is more flexible as you can cancel at any time.

Microsoft Office 365 Home costs AU$129 per year, or AU$13 per month.

Read morePC gaming and Windows could be heading for a messy break up

Microsoft Office 365 Personal costs AU$99 per year, or AU$10 per month.

You can try Office for one month as a free trial but it requires your payment details, and will charge you for an annual subscription at the end of the trial unless you cancel.

What does Microsoft Office 365 include?

Read moreMicrosoft give us a first look at the Surface Neo

Both Home and Personal include the full suite of Office apps and services. The only difference is that Home gives access to six people, while Personal is just for one.

Microsoft Office 365 Home includes:

  • Office for up to 6 people across all their devices

  • Apps for Windows, macOS, iOS, Android

  • Word

  • Excel

  • PowerPoint Starcraft 2 official page.

  • Outlook

  • Publisher (PC only)

  • Access (PC only)

  • OneDrive with 1TB storage for 6 people

  • Skype

  • OneNote

  • Technical support

Microsoft Office 365 Personal includes:

Read moreMicrosoft's solution for COVID-19 is a free Teams subscription for six months
  • Office for one 1 person across all their devices

  • Apps for Windows, macOS, iOS, Android

  • Word

  • Excel

  • PowerPoint

  • Outlook

  • Publisher (PC only)

  • Access (PC only)

  • OneDrive with 1TB storage for 1 person

  • Skype

  • OneNote

  • Technical support

Either one is a great deal as it offers every Office service and unlimited sign-ins across devices, so you can use Office on your computer, tablet and phone and any other device you might have (for example more than one computer or on your personal and work phone).

You just download the apps you want from the app store on your PC, Mac, phone or tablet and then sign in with your Microsoft account details.

As well as access to everything and a generous 1TB of cloud storage, Office 365 is great because it will automatically update all of the software to the latest version. So when Microsoft improves Word, you'll get the update over the internet.

Read moreMicrosoft is getting rid of one version of Skype

That perk goes for every service on Office 365.

It's worth noting that if you stop paying for Office 365, you can no longer access any of the services. You have to keep paying to keep access to the apps and your existing files. Venom voice changer.

Office 365 buy outright

Office 365 suggests you save those files in the cloud using OneDrive, but it is possible to save files directly to your devices instead if you prefer, which is an easier way of having access to your saved files if you plan to only pay for Office for a short amount of time.

Read moreBlack Friday Deal: 15% off Microsoft Surface Pro 7

Can you buy Microsoft Office outright?

If you don't like the idea of a monthly subscription and would prefer to pay once for Office and have it forever like the good old days then you can still do that with Microsoft Office Home & Student 2019 (current version at the time of writing).

Office 365 does not have a year in its branding it as it is constantly updated. Buying Office Home & Student 2019 as a one-off purchase means you will forever have that edition of Office, and you won't receive software updates to add new features or upgrade to the next year's version. It does however receive security updates.

Office Home & Student costs AU$199 as a one-off payment and includes:

Office 365 Buy Outright

Office 365 suggests you save those files in the cloud using OneDrive, but it is possible to save files directly to your devices instead if you prefer, which is an easier way of having access to your saved files if you plan to only pay for Office for a short amount of time.

Read moreBlack Friday Deal: 15% off Microsoft Surface Pro 7

Can you buy Microsoft Office outright?

If you don't like the idea of a monthly subscription and would prefer to pay once for Office and have it forever like the good old days then you can still do that with Microsoft Office Home & Student 2019 (current version at the time of writing).

Office 365 does not have a year in its branding it as it is constantly updated. Buying Office Home & Student 2019 as a one-off purchase means you will forever have that edition of Office, and you won't receive software updates to add new features or upgrade to the next year's version. It does however receive security updates.

Office Home & Student costs AU$199 as a one-off payment and includes:

Unfortunately, that's it - buying Office outright does not get you popular apps like Outlook for email or OneNote. It also doesn't get you OneDrive cloud storage, and you can't use the apps on your phone or tablet - you must download Office to one PC or Mac and forever use it there.

It is quite restrictive, and we only recommend Office Home & Student's one-off payment if you want the basic Word, Excel and PowerPoint set up on one computer and if you save files locally to the computer or a hard drive.

Otherwise, Microsoft is clearly pushing a superior version of Office with Office 365. While it might take a while to get your head round an annual payment for software, the advantages are clear to see. Think of it as the Netflix of home computing.

You get the latest version of every app regularly updated, generous cloud storage, an email client, sign-in across all your devices for up to six people and technical support. That's a pretty good deal.

If you're comfortable with cloud storage and need Office on more than your computer then Office 365 is worth the spend - it's more the getting used to paying a subscription for something that used to be a one off purchase that is the barrier rather than the value of the software itself.

This article was originally published on the 19th of December 2019.

The SSD that's not afraid of heights
More from Western Digital

Join the newsletter!

So this year saw the launch of Office 2013 and at the same time, Microsoft went all out with their SaaS (Software as a Service) offering – Office 365.

Office 365 Buy Outright

Now on the face of it, both appear to be the same thing – one is a boxed copy of Office that you buy outright (roughly £180) and the other is a copy you pay £10 per month per user for.

So you think…hey – this monthly thing sounds good. But wait, after 18 months it'll cost me more than if I'd bought the product outright. So why would I want to subscribe?

They are not the same.

For some unknown reason Microsoft saw fit to change the licensing model of Office with the 2013 editions. Previously there was the ability to install (using the same license) a copy of the software on a laptop as long as it was in use by the same individual. Now the license is for one machine and one user. Microsoft originally even decided that once installed on a computer it was tied to that machine too, but backtracked after enough people complained that they'd need to buy another copy if they ever changed their PC.

The second massive change is the method of licensing the software. Instead of supplying a DVD and a key (for install and subsequent activation), with the boxed software you have to go through this convoluted process of setting up a Microsoft ID, entering the key from the box to register, then go to the download page and get a different key to then use to install the software. This is ok if there is just one of you, but if you have (say) 20 copies and want to be able to manage them, then you're stuck. If you thought you could set up one Microsoft account to manage all of these licenses you'd be mistaken. There is no way to identify individual copies of the software and you'll find yourself screaming when you can't tell which key was used on which computer. Microsoft know this and admit it's a problem but are not forthcoming with a solution. Arrrggghhhhh!

In reality Office 365 is a bit more than just a subscription to Office 2013. We'll explore that when we look at cloud computing but in this instance we'll just look at the Office Suite itself.

Office 365 is licensed per user; currently each subscriber can install/use the software on 5 devices. So you can install it on your work desktop, work laptop, work tablet and home PC, as well as access it on your mobile device via Office Web Apps. Now if you are, like a great many, a user of several machines, then this makes financial sense, as ordinarily you'd now need to buy a copy of the software for each machine that you use. That could get quite expensive.

The other great thing about Office 365 is that as long as you continue to subscribe you are able to use the most current versions of the software. Availability of the latest version via 365 is not as rapid as via the retail or licensing channels but then you don't have to pay extra for the privilege. And in any case, you possibly don't want to be installing the latest version until a few months have passed or when you're in a position to upgrade all your machines at the same time.

Lastly it is an easy way to standardize the software in your business and fix your software spend on a monthly basis. It also removes software from the PC upgrade cycle cost.

There is one big BUT of course. To use the software you have to continue to pay. If you decide at some point you don't want to continue with it the software on your computers will stop working and you'll need to either go out and buy the software, re-subscribe or license via other means.

It won't surprise me that in the next edition or two, this will be the only way to use the Office suite of applications – the world is moving towards more subscription based models – the mobile phone companies have been doing this for years quite successfully and is now a proven model and indeed tends to tie in customers for the longer term.





broken image