Companies rarely reassess a PowerPoint chart add-in because the existing solution no longer works as intended. More often, the trigger is financial or structural: rising license counts, growing administrative effort, limited visibility into usage, or additional IT work required to manage the solution.
In practice, however, that question does not go far enough. License costs do not arise in isolation. They are closely connected to the licensing model, how teams collaborate, the level of administrative effort involved, and the technical work required to keep the solution running. Companies that look only at the price per license can quickly overlook the costs that actually arise during ongoing use.
In many companies, license costs for PowerPoint chart add-ins grow over several years without being actively managed. The software works, users know how to use it, and stable reporting processes take priority. As a result, existing license structures often go without a thorough review for a long time.
Companies should take a closer look at their current licensing situation, especially if they recognize one or more of the following patterns:
Over time, this can create a license inventory that works in day-to-day operations but no longer clearly aligns with actual usage or business value. That is why it is worth reviewing license costs regularly and in a structured way, not only when the next renewal comes due.
Companies assessing the cost structure of a PowerPoint chart add-in should not look only at the annual license price. What matters is the total cost of operating the solution.
This starts with direct license costs. The relevant factor is not only the price per user, but also how total costs develop over time. It is especially important to ask whether the licensing model fits actual usage within the company. Is only a small group of experts licensed? Or should the solution be used more broadly across the organization? Depending on the model, this difference can have a significant financial impact.
There is also the effort required for license management and contract renewals. The evaluation should consider not only how many licenses exist, but also how easily usage, demand, and administration can be tracked. Depending on internal processes, procurement, IT, and business departments may all be involved. This coordination takes time and uses internal capacity.
IT operations effort should also be included in the evaluation. With a chart add-in for PowerPoint, IT regularly handles tasks related to versions, compatibility, updates, and rollout. When updates need to be tested, distributed, or supported, that is not a side issue. It is part of the ongoing cost structure.
Software redeployment should also be considered. If licenses regularly need to be reassigned, installations adjusted, or new versions rolled out, recurring operational effort is created. A simple review of the license price often does not fully capture this effort.
A thorough review of license costs should make several directly measurable cost areas visible.
1. Direct license costs
How high are the annual costs? How do they develop over several years? How much do they increase when the number of users grows?
2. Contract and renewal effort
How much effort does the annual renewal require? Which internal reviews, approvals, and coordination steps does it trigger?
3. Technical operations
What effort is required for installation, updates, compatibility checks, and software distribution?
4. Support and internal questions
How much support does the organization need during ongoing operations? Which questions go to IT, business departments, or power users?
Only when these cost areas are reviewed together does a realistic picture of the overall cost structure emerge.
In addition to directly visible costs, there is a second level that often receives too little attention in cost reviews. These are indirect costs that do not appear as separate invoices but continue to affect ongoing operations.
A thorough evaluation should therefore also consider the following cost areas.
1. License dependency and collaboration gaps
It is also important to understand the conditions under which created charts can be fully edited later. If an add-in-based chart is edited without the corresponding add-in, its structure may be affected. This can make rework, corrections, or recreation necessary. For a cost review, the key question is therefore not only who creates charts, but also who later updates, adjusts, or reuses them.
2. Lack of visibility into actual usage
When companies have only limited visibility into license inventories that have grown over time, it becomes difficult to identify over-licensing, unused licenses, or unnecessary renewals. A lack of transparency therefore not only leads to higher costs, but also makes it harder to evaluate actual demand reliably.
3. Recurring coordination across the company
Organizational attention is also a cost factor. Coordination around user counts, renewals, responsibilities, updates, or technical adjustments regularly requires time from IT, procurement, and business departments. These efforts rarely appear as separate budget items, but they can take meaningful time in daily operations and should therefore be included in the true cost structure of a chart add-in.
Indirect costs are not less relevant than direct costs. They are simply harder to see. For that reason, they should be intentionally included in any cost review.
These questions help companies evaluate license costs not in isolation, but in the context of how those costs arise.
License costs for PowerPoint chart add-ins can only be reviewed meaningfully when they are considered together with usage, collaboration, administration, and technical operations.
The price per license is only one part of the overall cost structure. What matters is the total cost of operating the solution and how well the licensing model fits the way people work across the company.
A structured evaluation makes it clear whether existing costs still match actual usage, which efforts arise around administration and operations, and which indirect effects also influence license demand.
Are you reviewing your current charting solution? Our sales team can show you how empower® Chart Creation supports chart creation in PowerPoint and which options may make sense for your organization. Contact our team.