Official: Why did(n't) you get a Logos subscription?

24

Comments

  • RJ
    RJ Member Posts: 49 ✭✭

    5. No

    I'm just a casual user. No libraries, a few features and 134 books. I use Logos to search my Bible, maybe look at Factbook. I have one subscription for $3 per month (aside from internet access & Sky), and that's enough for me. I'm on a pension, so I don't want to spend money on yet another addiction (books), thanks 😊 (but I love reading these forums for free).

    I hope it all works out for Logos.

  • Mike Childs
    Mike Childs Member Posts: 3,116 ✭✭✭

    Now that we are farther along in the subscription process, I wonder what % of Logos users are subscribers?  Will Logos disclose that information?


    "In all cases, the Church is to be judged by the Scripture, not the Scripture by the Church," John Wesley

  • Dru Lattin
    Dru Lattin Member Posts: 53 ✭✭

    Now that we are farther along in the subscription process, I wonder what % of Logos users are subscribers?  Will Logos disclose that information?

    I don't know, but according to X, they have over 25k folks signing up for the subscription so far. 

    https://x.com/Logos/status/1856157991172747516

  • Fabian
    Fabian Member Posts: 1,006 ✭✭✭

    Mark,

    I make it short. 

    FIX FIRST YOUR APP! The bugs have reported.

    SECOND: ADD THE FEATURES I REQUESTED! I have mentioned before.

    Right now I'm totally upset with this stupid software. Logos is a complete mess https://community.logos.com/forums/t/227020.aspx.

    Χριστὸς ἐν ὑμῖν, ἡ ἐλπὶς τῆς δόξης· 

  • Donovan R. Palmer
    Donovan R. Palmer Member Posts: 2,498 ✭✭✭

    1. Yes, I am a subscriber

    I was a Logos Now subscriber from day one, so transitioning to this subscription model was easy. Much like Logos Now, I would rather not wait two years for changes in the software, particularly in areas that are not that exciting and will be a headline in selling a new major version. The legacy fallback license was a further deal clincher for me. My hope is that this is a genuine driver of consistent regular growth because Logos Now did not last long. I also hope that some of the future developments include new datasets, filling out some of the gaps and improving some of the existing data sets.

    What I do miss from what then became 'Faithlife Connect - No Library' is to pick several Faithlife ebooks a month. The problem with the new offering is that Logos picks all the books. For me, this is a real hit-and-miss. This current month's extra book was not that compelling.  So, I would like to see some ability for subscribers to select from a selection of books.

    The 5% thing on purchases is cool, and can pay for the subscription from books I would have bought anyhow.

    .

  • DMM
    DMM Member Posts: 88 ✭✭

    Now that we are farther along in the subscription process, I wonder what % of Logos users are subscribers?  Will Logos disclose that information?

    I don't know, but according to X, they have over 25k folks signing up for the subscription so far. 

    https://x.com/Logos/status/1856157991172747516

    According to their "What's Trending" e-mail that they send out on Saturdays...

    As of November 2, 12,471 got the main freebie, and only 1,072 got the Subscriber freebie.

    1 week later, 20,395 more people got the main freebie, and only 2,849 for the Subscriber freebie.

    For a total of 32,866 people who got the main freebie and only 3,921 who got the Subscriber freebie.

    I'm sure there are some who already owned it, some who don't want it, and I know Logos didn't do a very good job of making it known (no e-mail, only in the past few days did they put a link to it with the other deals, before that the link was buried in the FAQ), but only 15% of subscribers got the free book? (3921 / 25000) Sure, it's early in the month but still...


     

  • scooter
    scooter Member Posts: 1,035 ✭✭

    We want to ensure that Logos meets the needs of everyone who wants to study the Bible. To help us make sure we're doing that as effectively as possible, would you take a minute to answer these two questions?

    • Have you subscribed to the new version of Logos?
    1. Yes, I'm a current subscriber (or on the free trial)
    2. No, I tried it for a bit, but I didn't renew
    3. No, but I plan to get it reasonably soon
    4. No, and I'm undecided whether I'll get it
    5. No, and I plan not to get it
  • What's the primary reason for your decision?
  • Please be honest. It's important to us that we understand how well (or not!) we're meeting your needs, so we want to understand what you really think.

    Thanks!

    I'm a 5: no got, no plans.

    I use L 7 days a week.  I highlight, write notes, keep a database on topics of interest.  For this, I have the L8 free version, + it is sufficient.

    I am retired.  Beyond cable + phone, I need no other subscription to entangle my wallet.  Food + lodging costs have gone up; this affair necessitates monetary caution.

    I am a fiscal conservative.  Riding the lightening of a subscription is not prudent.

  • Phil Miller
    Phil Miller Member Posts: 38 ✭✭✭

    • Have you subscribed to the new version of Logos?
    1. Yes, I'm a current subscriber (Max)
  • What's the primary reason for your decision?
  • I have been a logos user for over 20 years, and I have been a subscriber since the first day that "Logos Now" was offered.  I have always found Logos extremely beneficial for personal bible study as well as for lesson prep for teaching. 

    Over the years, I have attended numerous Camp Logos trainings, both in person and virtually, and while I learned a great deal about the software through those endeavors, it also continually enlightened me about how very powerful the software is and the depths that the software could be explored.  

    While the software has been very beneficial over the years, it has also been challenging to leverage a lot of the power and functionality that is encapsulated in the software.  To that end, I think the new AI functionality has made the software significantly easier to use.  Tasks and queries that previously required knowledge of the specific syntax required to garner the desired results are much simpler now to acquire through the new AI features.  This not only reduces the time needed to accomplish the same tasks as before, but also opens up the opportunities to leverage new functionality that was previously unknown or too difficult to remember the needed syntax to be used.

    Back in the day (Logos Now),  I liked when new functionality was released every six weeks.  I am glad that the new subscription model has returned to that.

    Phil

  • Steven MacDonald
    Steven MacDonald Member Posts: 209 ✭✭

    1.  I am a subscriber who started in the preview.  I was one of the more vocal ones :

    My primary reason for subscribing is to get the 2 year fallback license.

    Please listen to all your users and make some concessions on the toolbar.  A simplified one is fine for those who want it but don't wreck the experience of your more advanced and seasoned users.  Workflows are important.  And it's not hard to provide icons for those who want them.

    I am a Max subscriber and want to see more advanced tools to study the original languages, not just more books.

    I would like to see a growing list of features that will be included with the fallback license.

    You have promised a lot and I would like to see you deliver.

    I am giving you a chance to win me over.  If I decide it is not worth it after my two years, I won't renew.

    Thanks.

  • Jack Hairston
    Jack Hairston Member Posts: 1,087 ✭✭

    • Have you subscribed to the new version of Logos?
    1. Yes, I'm a current subscriber (or on the free trial)
    2. No, I tried it for a bit, but I didn't renew
    3. No, but I plan to get it reasonably soon
    4. No, and I'm undecided whether I'll get it
    5. No, and I plan not to get it
  • What's the primary reason for your decision?
  • Number 1, with flashing lights and Star Wars soundtrack!

    I have been an enthusiastic Logos-ite since version 3 for two features: Notes and Searching.

    When the subscription option became available, I jumped at it because:

    • It was cheaper ($99) than buying the next complete version ($300-ish)
    • It keeps Faithlife economically healthy. Having invested many hours to build a pile of Notes, it would kill me if Faithlife went out of business.
    • It is a great value for the cost, and it keeps me out of bars. [smile]
  • Allen Browne
    Allen Browne Member Posts: 1,892 ✭✭✭

    • Have you subscribed to the new version of Logos?

    1. Yes, I'm a current subscriber (or on the free trial)
    2. No, I tried it for a bit, but I didn't renew
    3. No, but I plan to get it reasonably soon
    4. No, and I'm undecided whether I'll get it
    5. No, and I plan not to get it

    • What's the primary reason for your decision?

    5 (no) for the short term; 4 (undecided) for the longer term.

    There's little of benefit for me in the sub. (I don't want, need, or trust AI to generate content for me in Logos.)

    For the first time ever, I've not bought a base package with this release. Over time I bought 10 base packages in Logos 10 (15 if you count them incrementally), but now I'm excluded.

  • Jonathan Bradley
    Jonathan Bradley Member Posts: 921 ✭✭✭

    I'm in the 1. Yes, I subscribe camp. I have truly enjoyed and benefited greatly from the features that I used during the early access and am continuing to use them. I am looking forward to what comes out in the future.

    Pastor, Mt. Leonard Baptist Church, SBC

  • TWBeining
    TWBeining Member Posts: 25 ✭✭

    I am subscribed, but I wish I wasn't. I do not care about the AI junk and will never use it. I thought the rest might be worth the price and in my opinion I was wrong. 

    I wish I could just get a refund or just get the new subscription turned off and go back to L10. It was much better.

    I know you didn't ask about the 2025 packages so here's a bonus. There have never been packages so sad. They are truly sad. (This includes Logos and Verbum both.) This is my opinion, your mileage may very.

    I've been using Libronix/Logos/Verbum for 25+ years and have never been this disappointed.

    Tim

  • Frank Hodges
    Frank Hodges Member Posts: 288 ✭✭

    Have you subscribed to the new version of Logos?
    1, current subscriber
    What's the primary reason for your decision?
    To be frank, one of the biggest deciding factors was fear. With all the uncertainty about the future of pricing, and fear of missing out on early bird pricing forever if I waited too long, I reluctantly subscribed to Max. I was excited about what the future holds since the announcement of Pro, and I'm still holding out hope that in the future there will be something I feel adds value for my personal use case, but I haven't yet (not to say I don't like AI and even BSB, they're both great features, but neither of them are groundbreaking enough to change the entire purchasing model imo). I feel as though I was getting a better deal with my Connect subscription. A few of the perks (5% off and 5% back), along with the fact I want Logos to succeed and don't mind contributing to that success in what little way I can, are incentive enough to stick with it. 

    I would say, more so than the changes themselves, the marketing behind them is probably where I felt the most let down... There were times that I considered looking at alternatives (what you guys have going for you as a company is the alternatives really aren't even comparable). That said, I'm human, and I'll probably feel a bit different after some big sale or groundbreaking feature comes along to change my perspective again.
  • John
    John Member Posts: 548 ✭✭

    Have you subscribed to the new version of Logos? No, and I'm undecided whether I'll get it

    What's the primary reason for your decision?

    Several reasons.

    Logos wants me to pay a subscription fee which in part includes subscribing to use resources I already own.

    This is illegal, immoral and unethical.

    Logos is penalizing users who do not subscribe in several different ways.

    In the last 2 years I have invested over $ 5 figures $ into Logos resources. Yet today Logos refuses to allow me to purchase any of the 2025 libraries which would allow me to add a few missing resources in my Library. And even if Logos did allow me to purchase them, I would pay a higher price than a subscriber would. This is a carrot and stick approach attempting to force me into paying a subscription fee that was never part of the original deal, rewarding subscribers while punishing traditional customers who simply do not want or need the new "features".

    One of the "carrots" Logos added to entice existing users to subscribe is a LFL (Legacy fallback). This is asking investors who have already bought and paid for the software to further finance ongoing development. Yet without any indication as to what new features are being planned. To my knowledge the only new "feature" is not a feature at all, but a redesigning of a portion of the user interface. Judging from user discussion on the forum, a large number of users find the new Toolbar to be a step backwards. In any case, it is not a "new feature", it is a redesign of the user interface which does not add any new functionality. Logos decided to "punish" existing users by forcing them to keep using the "old" toolbar, while "rewarding" subscribers with the new one. I do not think they anticipated how many users would hate the new one. Once this decision caused problems with training and use in the classroom, Logos still stubbornly refuses to allow even the subscribers a choice between the old and the new.

    What new "features" am I being asked to pay for?

    If this new toolbar is an example of the highest priority of the promised LFL "features", it appears to me that there is not a well thought out roadmap of where the company intends to take the software. Change for the sake of change is not a "new feature". And changes to the interface that add no new functionality is not a "new feature". Maybe the company does have a list of ideas they want to implement ... but they did not bother to show me what it was. So there is no choice but to assume they are making it up as they go. Will the next idea be a good one? We have only past performance as an indicator ... and the toolbar is a bust. A simple option giving the user a choice would eliminate all of the trouble and allow for a smooth transition. Why would Logos be opposed to a smooth transition?

    If I do subscribe, it will probably be just to get a discount (grab the carrot), and I will probably unsubscribe immediately. I do find it interesting how many forum members are paying for one or two year subscriptions in advance ... without having the slightest idea what they are buying. That is not justified by anything I have ever read in the Bible.

    It is too late in the game for Logos to keep the Desktop program an offline research library, which is what virtually all of their long term loyal customers bought into. Even before sticking the AI junk into it, they were making "features" that were easily implemented offline and locally, and made them internet dependent. In time the desktop app will become totally dependent upon an internet connection just as the mobile apps are now.

    If Logos wants my approval, it needs to get rid of the stick. Do not punish your customers, for any reason ... ever. If the carrot is not enough to convince them, leave them alone. Respect their right to make their own purchasing decisions. Do not try to make them second class customers. Great companies (even secular ones) become great by serving their customers better than the competition. Not by manipulating them into buying something they did not ask for.

    Focus on making Logos the best software available. I see more effort being put into marketing and planning how to increase profits. A monthly, continual, never-ending re-fleecing of the sheep might be more profitable for the company. But a Bible software company should be concerned with more than raw profit. Did Logos ever do any customer surveys and find out how many of its customers really wanted AI in their Bible software? If not all of them want it, why are they all being asked to pay for it?

  • Fr. Nicklaus Winker
    Fr. Nicklaus Winker Member Posts: 43 ✭✭

    1. I subscribed, was previously a Logos Now: No Library, which became Faithlife Connect.

    Faithlife Connect was getting to be a little hard to justify. I never cared about the rental books. I ended up buying the full feature set when purchasing a base package during a sale. So the new subscription is a better deal.

    I preach probably 30 different occasions a month, but don't use the desktop app for that. I mostly use a handful of commentaries and an interlinear for preaching. So I don't need a subscription for that. Nor do I need 90% of the 18k resources in my library. 

    I admit to a bit of a Logos addiction. So, yes FOMO. I want to have a quality academic library with an emphasis on Catholic sources. It is a hobby. I love the power of having a much of university library on my phone as possible, even if I won't sit and read every book. Being able to be out to lunch and answer a question referencing the ABD, Kittel, and the Church Fathers, or Critical Editions of Shakespeare, has made my investment worthwhile to me. I enjoy sitting down and digging into knowledge. I also have a few outlines for academic papers for when my pastoral work slows down.

    The subscription, both discounts and features, enable my hobby. Smart Search is good, not perfect, but very helpful and worth it to me when I want to search my library for on a wild hair to learn something new.

    I share the frustrations with others that Verbum subscriptions are distinct from Logos. It is less absurd than with Logos/Verbum Now, but still silly. It does suggest that new Catholic dataset features are less likely going forward. Which is unfortunate, but understandable, given the market. 

    I wish Noet didn't disappear. I want more church fathers, and Catholic primary sources. But those books are going to be harder to get onto the platform as a lot of these tools make their own subscriptions. Maybe Logo's move to subscription might make some academic publishers more willing to play ball. 

  • DM Solomon
    DM Solomon Member Posts: 3

    I'm a current subscriber but don't see why I need to be. Still not sure what the benefit is of the subscription. I'm losing money but not gaining value. I see that there are now more features, more expansions that must be purchased. I once owned Platinum, while in theory, I still have it, however, when purchasing, it does not reflect. In order to be Platinum today, I need to spend almost $600. So, I may have some Platinum resources, but don't have all the features. 

    Why am I paying for the subscription again?

    I've been a lifetime user of Logos (Libronix). Still, the former goal of getting to the top tier has been dulled by the goalpost being moved further and further, especially for a missionary in Africa. It's just too expensive at this stage.

  • Mike Binks
    Mike Binks Member, MVP Posts: 7,428 ✭✭✭

    I once owned Platinum, while in theory, I still have it,

    One needs to look at the packages, Platinum and the like, the same way one looks at a Christmas Hamper from Harrods.

    You get one this Christmas, if you don't eat everything, you still have it when the next Christmas comes around and a new hamper arrives.

    One does not expect all the contents of the new hamper to be the same as the first hamper - they ring the changes a little each year.

    Just because one has a new hamper this year doesn't mean one wasn't the owner of a hamper last year. Indeed one will always be the owner of that hamper and may be an owner of the next.

    tootle pip

    Mike

    How to get logs and post them.   (now tagging post-apocalyptic fiction as current affairs) Latest Logos, MacOS, iOS and iPadOS

  • DMB
    DMB Member Posts: 13,407 ✭✭✭

    Logos wants me to pay a subscription fee which in part includes subscribing to use resources I already own.

    This is illegal, immoral and unethical.

    'Illegal' sounds a bit extreme, though lawyer-ing, Faithlife's wiggle-wording hasn't been for naught.  The transition from license ownership to license renting, while claiming not to charge twice ... they essentially got lazy (not dynamic'ing the feature and book rentals). Morals and ethics had to give way to practicalities.  And so 'the discount' ... but L10s only, I think?  Logos 2 thru 9 and plain-jane book buyers ... supposed to just suck it up (tummy).

    "If myth is ideology in narrative form, then scholarship is myth with footnotes." B. Lincolm 1999.

  • EastTN
    EastTN Member Posts: 1,422 ✭✭✭

    It is too late in the game for Logos to keep the Desktop program an offline research library, which is what virtually all of their long term loyal customers bought into.

    There's absolutely no technical reason they couldn't do that. Desktops are faster and more powerful than ever. Any feature they implemented off-line a few years ago, they could implement off-line today. It's a choice. It's FaithLife's choice to make, but it is a choice.

  • Doc B
    Doc B Member Posts: 3,537 ✭✭✭

    I'm in the *reluctant* #1 category...Logos Max.

    It felt like it was at gunpoint at first, but after doing a cost analysis comparing what I'd spent when L10, 9, 8, and 7 rolled out, I decided I'd spend as much as a 2-year Max scrip would cost me. The only reason I could think of to not subscribe was to be stubborn, and that hurts me and would be irrational. 

    I'm a #4 long term. The rollout has featured very little new stuff for all the hype. (Yes, I do like the dynamic TB.)  I'm patient...I'll give you two years for the programmers to cash the check the marketing folks wrote. 

    I will say, if in 2026 the price increases substantially or the promised features don't appear, you'll lose me and probably a significant number of reluctant folks like me. Logos has created a lot of bad will amongst long-term customers with this change. You can't just clear the bar on this one; you are going to have to raise it a bit and then clear it to get back in the good graces of some of us old folks. Getting there is possible, and many of us will eat some crow if that happens. (I hope I do!) But falling short is also possible and it won't be a good look for the company or the good folks who work there if that bar ends up on the mat with the software.

    Eating a steady diet of government cheese, and living in a van down by the river.

  • David Strawn
    David Strawn Member Posts: 10

    1. Yes, I subscribed shortly after the plan was released

    Reason - I have used Logos since version 2 (about 1995-96 I think) and have always been pleased with their upgrades. Therefore, I am going to try this new subscription model for now and see if it really works. So far I have been fairly pleased with what I see. The changes are taking a bit of re-learning, but they have not prevented me from using the software as effectively and efficiently as I had been able to do in version 10.  

    AM however skeptical about the move by virtually every software company toward a subscription model. As I shared in another post on another site, I fear this may be just another opportunity to gouge money out of users. I am, however, going to give Logos a chance to prove they are not like those other software companies. I will see if they keep their promise that we can continue to use what we have whether we continue our subscription or not. I don't plan to cancel my subscription, but I'm leaving my options open. 

  • Frank Sauer
    Frank Sauer Member Posts: 1,430 ✭✭✭

    The only reason I could think of to not subscribe was to be stubborn, and that hurts me and would be irrational. 

    I'm sure each of us not subscribing has their own reasoning and would have to decide whether it hurts or benefits us as users...

    I can think of two reasons that I even consider subscribing:

    1 - I do like new features

    2 - While I still prefer actual purchasing as an option, the fact that Logos tried to meet half way with the LFL made me consider given them ONE chance to impress me with it.

    A few Reasons why I won't subscribe:

    1. As a L10 FFS owner, I really see little in way of new features that interest me.... The AI stuff isn't what I'm looking for.... Instant Dark/Light? I could care less.... Dynamic Toolbar - no thanks!, Bible Study Builder - may have potential, though I already have my templates for that, Sermon Features on Android - see point 2

    2. I gave up on Sermon Features with Logos after they took away the Sermon File Addin... The original replacement required users to change their templates to use and as the Sermon Features have grown, the lack of Android access prevented me from bothering with it at all.... So why is the gain of Sermon Tools on Android a negative for me??? When has Feature Parity ever been locked behind a paywall? I could be wrong and have asked a few times on the Forums with no response or examples of a user being charged for Feature Parity.... Were Mac or iOS users ever charged for access to Features that were owned if they would have access to if they were using Windows? I don't recall that happening, again I could be wrong.... However, I own the Sermon Features and I have access on Windows, Mac if I chose to buy a Mac and iOS if I were to use an iPad - why do I have to pay for Feature Parity?

    3. With the advent of the Subscription Model - I can no longer honestly recommend the product - so do I want to promote something I disagree with by purchasing? I do not like the fact that New Users or Users who never bought the L10 FFS are left without if for any reason they have to cancel their subscription.... The thought that a user could pay for 10 years and have a need to cancel.... Then lose the features is not something that I can endorse.... While it would not effect me personally, that is just not something I could recommend.

    Logos 10 - OpenSuse Tumbleweed, Windows 11, Android 15 & Android 14

  • Chris Heil
    Chris Heil Member Posts: 158 ✭✭

    1. I am a current annual subscriber, waiting for the opportunity to be a two-year subscriber.

    If the subscription model had not been introduced, I would likely have upgraded to each new version of Logos anyway. The subscription model provides the opportunity to get new features on a regular 6-week cycle and even earlier if I decide something is worth using while in beta and not have to work through a year of changes with each major upgrade. The cadence should also help with quicker-to-see refinement of features that need tweaked after initial release.

    Windows 11 & macOS 15 (Logos Max - Beta) | iOS 18 (Logos Mobile Beta)

  • Stephen
    Stephen Member Posts: 200 ✭✭

    Yes, I subscribed to premium and taking the second year discount. So, I got two years for the price that a typical logos major update has cost me in the past. So I think I am good for now.

    I am not happy about subscriptions, any of them, but the business model has been proven over the years as more and more companies jump on the band wagon whether it is music, movies, shows, etc. I am sure some have failed however.

    The proof will be in a year or two and how many of us renew. Time will tell. For giggles I bought a entry level package of the "other" bible software system as I wanted to compare and contrast for the fun of it.

  • David Wanat
    David Wanat Member Posts: 1,826 ✭✭✭

    I should add that while I opted for Max (monthly, not two years), I am extremely disappointed with the Verbum libraries this time. 

    WIN 11 i7 9750H, RTX 2060, 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD | iPad Air 3
    Verbum Max

  • danwdoo
    danwdoo Member Posts: 567 ✭✭✭

    I subscribed as a person who sees value in the software and hopes this will enable more polishing and improving of existing features and not just endless new, but not always particular useful or finished ones. I want existing features that work really well over lots of new ones that are half done and I think a subscription may help enable this.

  • Into Grace
    Into Grace Member Posts: 692

    No, and I'm undecided whether I'll get it.

    I hate the subscription model. Logos advertises it as making their software more affordable. That’s untrue. They went to a subscription model to generate more revenue. Paying a subscription month after month and year after year adds up. The most expensive Bible software company became more expensive.

    The new features are not worth a subscription to me. I want to purchase new base packages. But Logos should not require a subscription. Until they drop the subscription requirement, I no longer recommend the company.

    http://www.TrinityExamined.com

  • Randall Cue
    Randall Cue Member Posts: 667 ✭✭

    1.) Yes I have subscribed.

    2.) I want to keep up with the latest enhancements.