Subscribe to Windows IT Pro

 

Get Newsletters

  • Get the Latest News
  • Product Updates
  • Helpful Tricks
  • Productivity Tips

Subscribe Now!

August 13, 2003 12:00 AM

Office 2003 Prices, Release Date Revealed

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #39854
Rating: (0)

Office 2003 Prices, Release Dates Revealed
   Yesterday, in what's becoming an increasingly common error, online retailer Amazon.com inadvertently leaked the retail prices for the upcoming Microsoft Office 2003 products. According to the UK version of Amazon.com's Web site, Office 2003 versions will retail for 119.99 pounds to 429.99 pounds and will be available beginning October 24. Individual Office 2003 applications will retail for 89.99 pounds to 419.99 pounds and will be available on the same date.
   An examination of the prices for similar Office XP products reveals that Microsoft is raising prices somewhat, a curious move in the face of rejuvenated competition from and interest in rival office-productivity suites from Corel, OpenOffice.org, and Sun Microsystems. For example, Office 2003 Professional Edition now costs 429.99 pounds, up from 397.99 pounds for Office XP Professional. Here's how the retail versions of the Office 2003 product lines break down.

Office 2003 suites:
   - Office 2003 Standard Edition for Students and Teachers--119.99 pounds; includes Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook, and PowerPoint (not eligible for future upgrades)
   - Office 2003 Standard Edition--349.99 pounds; includes Word, Excel, Outlook, and PowerPoint; upgrade--199.99 pounds
   - Office Small Business Edition--384.99 pounds; includes Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Publisher; upgrade--234.99 pounds
   - Office 2003 Professional Edition--429.99 pounds; includes Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, Publisher, and Access; upgrade--269.99 pounds

Office 2003 standalone products:
   - Excel 2003--199.99 pounds; upgrade--89.99 pounds
   - FrontPage 2003--179.99 pounds; upgrade 89.99 pounds
   - InfoPath 2003--179.99 pounds
   - OneNote 2003--169.99 pounds
   - Outlook 2003--89.99 pounds
   - PowerPoint 2003--199.99 pounds; upgrade 89.99 pounds
   - Project 2003--484.99 pounds
   - Proofing Tools 2003--66.99 pounds
   - Publisher 2003--139.99 pounds; upgrade 84.99 pounds
   - Visio Standard Edition 2003--169.99 pounds; upgrade 84.99 pounds
   - Visio Professional Edition 2003--419.99 pounds; upgrade 209.99 pounds
   - Word 2003--199.99 pounds; upgrade 89.99 pounds

These prices are for the retail versions of Office 2003 only. Microsoft will offer special volume-license versions of some Office 2003 products; those versions will include a slightly different mix of products. The current exchange rate has little or no bearing on US prices for these products. I expect Microsoft to formally announce worldwide pricing and availability at any time.

Related Content:

ARTICLE TOOLS

Comments
  • Jim
    9 years ago
    Aug 15, 2003

    someone just noticed this now? (way to go, journalists...) prices have been showing up on several other legit sites for 2 weeks (maybe more). for example, outpost.com even has pictures of the product boxes and everything. sheesh! it doesn't even seem that newsworthy anyway.

  • SayWhat?
    9 years ago
    Aug 13, 2003

    Would you please give those prices in US$? Put them in parentheses or something.


    Editor's note: We don't know the US prices yet, and doing the currency conversion won't help. That's not how pricing is structured. --Paul

You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here

advertisement

advertisement

White Papers

Get your Windows 7 deployment off to the right start by implementing PC lockdown. A locked-down environment is easier and cheaper to support since users are less likely to make unnecessary changes to the core system configuration - read more here!

Essential Guides

Is your iSCSI "lossy"? The reality is that most off-the-shelf Ethernet hardware deployed for iSCSI can lose packets, resulting in slow performance or application downtime. Learn how to assess your current iSCSI infrastructure and engineer an advanced iSCSI SAN infrastructure.

Web Seminars

What's the best way to keep your network safe from malware? In this web seminar, security expert Greg Shields suggests an alternative method to the traditional blacklisting approach that is common with anti-virus and anti-malware solutions.

eLearning Series

We bring the experts direct to you to share their real-world perspective and expertise. During each event, three sessions stream in real time, so you can learn, ask questions, and get solutions.
Upcoming event: Getting the Most with Exchange 2010 with Paul Robichaux

Subscribe to Windows IT Pro!

Windows is a trademark of the Microsoft group of companies. Windows IT Pro is used by Penton Media Inc. under license from owner.