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- 1.The license price is the smallest item. The biggest costs arise during manual creation — an industry-typical 4 to 8 hours per work instruction.
- 2.B2B SOP software is billed under four models: per user, per site, by SOP volume, or as an enterprise flat rate. Each fits a different company size.
- 3.The total cost of ownership (TCO) covers license, creation, maintenance, and audit rework — the last three are almost always overlooked in comparisons.
- 4.For 100 processes to be documented, manual creation effort runs to roughly 650 work hours. This is where it is decided whether software pays off.
Asking about the license price is misleading. The real cost of an SOP is not in the tool, it is in the creation — and that is exactly where the ROI is decided.
The question "What does SOP software cost?" almost always targets the license price. That is the wrong lever. When documenting industrial processes, the software license is the smallest cost block — the most expensive one is the working time that goes into creating each individual work instruction. Anyone who wants to assess costs realistically has to look at the total cost of ownership: license plus creation plus maintenance plus audit rework.
Which license models exist for SOP software?
SOP and work-instruction software is billed in the B2B market under four common models. Which one fits depends on headcount, site structure, and documentation volume. A rule of thumb: the more sites and the higher the turnover, the more a flat rate pays off compared with per-user billing.
| Model | Billed by | Fits |
|---|---|---|
| Per user (seat) | Active editors per month | Small QM teams, few authors |
| Per site | Number of plants / locations | Multi-site manufacturing |
| By SOP volume | Number of SOPs created / managed | Project-based documentation, audit preparation |
| Enterprise flat rate | Lump sum, unlimited use | Corporate groups, high turnover, shift work |
The hidden costs: creation, maintenance, audit
The license price is in the quote. The real costs are nowhere — they hide in working time. Creating a work instruction manually takes an industry-typical 4 to 8 hours: observing, photographing, pasting into Word, writing, the release ping-pong by email. On top comes maintenance: every process change makes the SOP outdated, and outdated SOPs are an audit finding.
These three items — creation, maintenance, audit rework — are overlooked in almost every software comparison, even though they exceed the license costs many times over. This is exactly where SOP management and SOP generation part ways: a management system only lowers maintenance and distribution costs. The creation costs — the largest block — stay untouched as long as someone writes every SOP by hand.
TCO calculation: documenting 100 processes
A realistic worked example makes the difference tangible. A mid-sized manufacturing operation wants to document 100 processes. Manually, at an average of 6.5 hours per work instruction, that comes to roughly 650 work hours for initial creation alone — tied up with QM staff or experienced engineers. With Video-to-SOP, the effort drops to about 10 minutes per SOP plus review.
| Item | Manual (Word) | Video-to-SOP |
|---|---|---|
| Time per SOP | Ø 6.5 hours | approx. 10 minutes |
| 100 processes, initial creation | approx. 650 work hours | approx. 17 work hours |
| Role tied up | QM / engineer | Process expert (films) + reviewer |
| Maintenance on change | Rewrite in Word | New video, minutes |
What does Soperion cost?
Soperion does not publish list prices, but the model behind them is deliberately simple: the price is based on the number of employees per plant — not on active users and not on individually counted licenses. That keeps the calculation predictable and transparent: no tallying logins, no retroactive license audits, no surprises at renewal. Whether a pilot at one plant or a rollout across several sites, the logic stays the same.
Instead of a price list there is a demo on a real process: you film one of your workflows, Soperion generates the SOP, and you see the before-and-after effort on your own material. From this comes a concrete quote — without a sales pitch, without a two-year project.
자주 묻는 질문
- What does SOP software cost per month?
- That depends on the license model — per user, per site, by SOP volume, or as an enterprise flat rate. But what is decisive for total cost is not the monthly price; it is the creation time per SOP: at 4 to 8 hours manual per instruction, the labor effort usually exceeds the license many times over.
- Why does Soperion not list prices on its website?
- The pricing model is deliberately simple: it is based on the number of employees per plant, not on counted users or licenses. We name the concrete price for your plant size after a short demo on a real process — without license math and without a sales pitch.
- When does SOP software pay off?
- As soon as the creation time saved exceeds the license costs. For 100 processes to be documented, the manual effort runs to roughly 650 hours — that figure is usually the tipping point, not the license price.