Overview
What is Oracle CPQ?
Oracle CPQ is a cloud-based application that helps sellers configure the right mix of products or services and create accurate, professional quotes to quickly meet their customers’ pricing needs.
Oracle CPQ Review
CPQ -- On Prem Combo
Oracle CPQ Cloud review
Oracle CPQ works for us
- Global configurations
- Pricing
- As a quoting tool
Oracle CPQ Review
My review with Oracle CPQ
Centralized Hub for Finance & Development - Oracle CPQ
Review
Guided Selling through CPQ
Accelerate Quotes and Reduce Costs
CPQ is definitely the 1-4-U
If you've got enough variables, then it's worth it
Oracle CPQ Review
Deep (not really) Thoughts of a 6 year CPQ Cloud Admin
Awards
Products that are considered exceptional by their customers based on a variety of criteria win TrustRadius awards. Learn more about the types of TrustRadius awards to make the best purchase decision. More about TrustRadius Awards
Popular Features
- Quote sharing/sending (16)8.484%
- Configuration options (16)7.979%
- Product configuration (16)7.979%
- Price adjustment (16)7.373%
Pricing
CPQ Pricing
$240.00
Entry-level set up fee?
- No setup fee
Offerings
- Free Trial
- Free/Freemium Version
- Premium Consulting/Integration Services
Product Demos
CPQsuite Demo (7.5 minutes)
Oracle CPQ Training | Oracle CPQ Certification Course Demo | What is Oracle CPQ | MindMajix
Oracle CPQ Cloud Service 2017 1Z0-976 questions and answers|CertTree
1Z0-436 exam Oracle CPQ Cloud Service 2016 Implementation Specialist | 1Z0-436 PDF Answers
Features
CPQ
Features related to configuring and pricing products and delivering quotes to customers.
- 8.4Quote sharing/sending(16) Ratings
Salespeople can share quotes and quote details with customers, via email, a customer portal, a personalized URL, or some other means.
- 7.9Product configuration(16) Ratings
Allows users to configure products and services by selecting bundles, constraints, options, preferences, etc.
- 7.9Configuration options(16) Ratings
Supports a robust, comprehensive level of detail around configuration options, including product features, services, quantity, etc. Options take into account availability and compatibility of selections.
- 7.4Pricing rules(15) Ratings
Determines price based on rules and hierarchies. Rules may consider customer demographics, availability, and/or product configuration.
- 7.3Price adjustment(16) Ratings
Sales users can adjust or override prices, based on coupons, discounts, markups, etc.
- 6.8Purchase history and open contracts(15) Ratings
Provides information about a customer’s previous purchases and current purchase/service agreements, which may factor into new sales or need to be modified to account for new sales.
- 7.4Guided selling/Sales portal(15) Ratings
Provides salespeople with tips, recommendations, or question sequences to help with product configuration and quoting, and/or to assist with cross-sell and upsell.
- 6.1CPQ reporting & analytics(16) Ratings
Users can report on and analyze CPQ processes. Metrics may include quoting cycle time, proposal acceptance rates, revenue, etc.
- 6.6CPQ-CRM integration(14) Ratings
Integrates to the company’s CRM to update the customer record.
- 7.3Attachments to quotes(16) Ratings
PDFs, contracts, videos, etc can be attached to quotes and/or proposals.
- 8Order capturing(6) Ratings
Allows the capture of orders of complex services and across multiple customer interaction channels such as - direct sales, contact center, point-of-sales, resellers, and customer self-service.
Product Details
- About
- Competitors
- Tech Details
- FAQs
What is Oracle CPQ?
Oracle CPQ Competitors
Oracle CPQ Technical Details
Deployment Types | Software as a Service (SaaS), Cloud, or Web-Based |
---|---|
Operating Systems | Unspecified |
Mobile Application | No |
Frequently Asked Questions
Comparisons
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Reviews and Ratings
(54)Attribute Ratings
Reviews
(1-2 of 2)Robust software, highly configure-able but not without challenges
- Automation of discount approvals and protection of margin- This is probably one of the most widely-discussed features. Our ability to set maximum allowable discount thresholds is imperative, especially when there are hard costs like vendor or partner royalties associated with each quote product. You can really lock product discounts down at the line item level (though presents slight frustrations as well).
- Configurable and customize-able - The code base is configurable and has allowed our in-house developer to develop some fully custom discount approval workflows. It can also be customized to program in maximum and minimum allowable values and graphical control elements like pop up menus, help text, list boxes, text fields, and other software components.
- Ability to implement business rules based on business requirements (i.e. publicly traded company, Sarbanes Oxley) is a plus.
- The software is great for implementing simple if/then logic (if X product is selected then Y product should also print on the agreement). Specific trigger rules can be written and implemented based on if/then criteria in order to meet business rules and scenarios. You can write as many quote requirements as you need.
- Integration with Salesforce
- One of the biggest challenges we've experience with the software is the lack of flexibility in deploying snippets of code changes to production. Unlike making changes in our Salesforce test environment, when deploying BM to a production environment our IT developer has to migrate a fully tested code-complete snapshot of sandbox to our production environment all at once. This presents challenges for IT when managing multiple projects from different areas of the business, specifically general sales availability expectations. In order to meet business deadlines, sprint cycles are managed against a floating deployment schedule to ensure that code for all projects are deployed at once.
- While the software is customize-able, deploying more complex changes takes much time and effort. Dedicated programmers and business systems analysts are needed to define the business rules, document the programmed changes, and deploy the software to production. It takes time to learn and and train on the logic behind the scenes. User training is definitely required for more complex configurations. There is no automated wizard to walk-through test configurations (this would be a nice-to-have).
- In a fast paced agile environment, the software is a little slow in how it integrates into business process, approvals, and Go-To-Market strategy.... at least in our business.
- Navigation between configuration pages is a little cumbersome.
- The software UI has been modified A LOT to make the user experience easier for the Sales teams. A lot of credit goes to the programmer but overall the software UI is still static and at times inflexible when compared to other new drag and drop/cloud-based wizard models.
- Would be nice if there were integration with our billing system (this is a nice to have!) Product Catalog (SKU) management becomes very manual and all the more important when there is lack of integration with the billing system. We have to coordinate efforts with Billing, Sales, and IT to make sure that the product catalog stays clean and up-to-date.
- While the ability to lock down discount allowables is a plus, this can also stall deals if allowables HAVE to be exceeded to win business (more of a process/culture change I know). Ad-hoc Emergency fixes can be deployed but you have to weigh the benefits against these "whirl-wind" resource costs.
- Sales Operations or IT would have a better understanding of the license user costs and ROI. I do know that Sales has experienced frustrations in the the lead gen-to-close process and have experienced delays with some deals. In other instances, the software has worked fine. I would love to see an analysis on how our lead-conversion rate, sales cycles, and proposal volume stacks up.
- Selection of products through graphical user components like dropdowns, list views and use of help text.
- Automation of trigger rules and implementation of if/then logic (i.e. If Product A is selected, then Product B should also print on the proposal)
- Adding products to quotes is straight-forward
- Entering product quantities and building order positions is straight-forward
- Lack of a wizard. A lot of credit goes out the the programmer in making the UI more accessible and more "wizard-like" to improve the user experience.
- Page to page navigation is cumbersome at times, especially during quote reconfiguration
- The quote page can be quite complex to navigate and configure before printing a proposal or contract
BigMachines, a maintenance nightmare!
- It handled heavy calculations very well, i.e. fast.
- It is possible to add any business logic to the system.
- Support and documentation are very poor. The support is bordering on unprofessional. The documentation on how to configure the system is minimal, and Googling information, returns no hits. So the cost of maintenance is high.
- It is very hard to maintain your implementation, and deployment of changes is non-trivial. So the cost of maintenance is high.
- The document engine (the rich text editor part) is so poor we turned back to the xsl markup language to deploy changes faster and have more control. The engine automagically removed variables. So the cost of maintenance is high.
- The user interface make it very hard and time consuming for users to produce quotes.
- Decreased the business value the IT department can deliver to salespeople and administrators using the company's sales software.
- It made it possible to create quotes with a quite complex price model.
- Validation rules
- Adding users
- Layout changes
- Deploying
- Debugging
- Finding all business logic