Need a SWAG estimate on SharePoint licensing for a new project? Here’s how you can get started on a high-level estimate for licensing a new on-premise SharePoint solution.
- Sharepoint 2013 Enterprise Trial Product Key
- Sharepoint 2013 Enterprise Product Key Finder
- Sharepoint 2013 Product Key
SharePoint licensing can be confusing to decode. While we typically work with clients who have dedicated Microsoft licensing advisors, we realize sometimes you may be looking for a ballpark number on the licensing to see if SharePoint may be an option from a budgeting standpoint.
- The following code example demonstrates how to retrieve the registry key of the installed SKU of SharePoint, Microsoft Project Server 2013, and other Office server products, and how to match the SKU with a hash table that stores the names and keys for all of the known SKUs of these products. The console output displays the name of the installed.
- Microsoft SharePoint Server 2013 Enterprise. Note: This key and the product activation process are different from prior operating system versions.
You can know the SharePoint Product Type by retrieving the registry key of the Installed SKU of SharePoint 2013. Check the following article to see how to detect installed SKU of SharePoint 2013 How to: Detect the installed SKU of SharePoint 2013 Just execute the code and that's it.
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In general, there are some important variables that can influence the estimate. Knowing these up front and why they are important can be helpful as you move forward. Before you can start trying to estimate the budget, I present some questions you’ll need to have answers to in order to begin to understand your licensing costs. I’ve also compiled what some references to further educate you on your options.
Please note that I’m going to focus this blog on estimating an on-premise solution so you can set a benchmark. There are other tools available that leverage cloud solutions, including SharePoint Online, but those are outside of this scope. All license estimates will be based on the Microsoft Open License without software assurance. While a development and testing environment will also be very important if you decide to do more detailed estimates and further budgeting, we’ll save that topic for a later blog post.
Sharepoint 2013 Enterprise Trial Product Key
What does your user base look like?
How many users will you have? How many are internal? How many are external?
Why this is will matter:
- Internal users will require a CAL which is about $100 per user.
- A forecast of the number of users will be used for Capacity planning for your SharePoint farm. Each server will require a server license . So the number of users may increase the cost of the server licensing.
Resources:
- Not sure what a User CAL is? This article does a good job explaining it. Note the section on external connector licensing is no longer required for SharePoint 2013.
- “External Users” means users that are neither your or your affiliates’ employees, nor your or your affiliates’ onsite contractors or onsite agents.
- You can find more info on external users on my previous blog Big Changes in SharePoint 2013 Licensing for Portal Clients.
My take:
The good news is for any users defined as “external” you won’t need to purchase CALs. The bad news…user CALs for internal users went up by 15% with SharePoint 2013. So, for Portal projects you are catching a big break. For Intranets, you are paying more than previous versions, but this is still a reasonable license cost compared to most of the other players in this space. This is especially true now they have included some of the FAST Search functionality.
Because we typically build Portals and Intranet solutions on SharePoint for our clients, we recommend considering user CALs vs. Device CALs because this allows the users to be licensed for all their possible access devices including smart phones, tablets, and home computers.
How Many Servers Will You Need?
How many SharePoint servers will you need? Will you need redundancy?
Why this will matter:
Each server will require a SharePoint server license. These are typically one-time licenses that cost around $7,000 per server. You will not need a SharePoint license for the server running SQL server.
Resources:
The Topologies for SharePoint 2013 diagram gives some helpful “rule of thumb” type recommendations on the number of servers required for different numbers of users. If you’re checking out the diagram, I’d recommend checking out the section under Example Topologies and see where your SharePoint farm seems to fall based on their guidelines.
My take:
At some point you will need to make some decisions on redundancy, load balancing, and fail over. You don’t want your new SharePoint solution to run slow at any time, and you also want to plan for rare but possible “outages” caused by hardware, software, and system maintenance. Slowness is typically avoided by sizing the farm correctly (also called capacity planning). Outages can be avoided or reduced by building redundancy into your farm. If one server goes down or needs to be taken offline, another server is there to do its job.
A SharePoint farm includes several different roles including a Web Front End (WFE), Application Server, and Database server. We typically recommend that different servers handle these differing roles. Smaller solutions can be hosted on a single server, but this is rare and not recommended.
While we do have multiple clients running SharePoint farms without multiple Web Front End and Application servers, it is considered a best practice to make sure your farm has redundancy and you’ve also made sure it can handle the load that the different features like search and document management will introduce.
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Which license is right?
Sharepoint 2013 Enterprise Product Key Finder
Will you need Enterprise features or can you get by with Standard Licensing?
Why this will matter:
If you are planning a project or solution that uses SharePoint 2013 Enterprise features, additional Enterprise CALs will be needed for users leveraging them. This increases the one-time cost for internal users by about 90% per user.
Resources:
The following information is defined in the document Microsoft Product Use Rights as requiring an Enterprise License, and is a good starting point for understanding what features you will need to pay extra for:
- Business Connectivity Services Line of Business Webparts
- Office 2013 Business Connectivity Services Client Integration
- Access Services
- Enterprise Search
- E-discovery and Compliance
- InfoPath Forms Services
- Excel Services, PowerPivot, PowerView
- Visio Services
- PerformancePoint Services
- Custom Analytics Reports
- Advanced Charting
The following blog by Noorez Khamis is a good reference based on a TechNet article and goes into a lot more detail on each of these enterprise-level features. Note the features not found in Standard are usually highlighted in pink in the middle column.
My take:
The most common scenario for enterprise features is for dashboard or Business Intelligence features. If the enterprise CAL is going to break the budget, there are options other than SharePoint for seamlessly integrating these features into a SharePoint Intranet or Portal.
There are also new eDiscovery and compliance options available in the enterprise version only, but these are not as common as this is relatively new feature in 2013.
Sharepoint 2013 Product Key
Getting Your SWAG Estimate
If you can answer the previous questions you should have enough basic information to get ballpark estimates for probable scenarios.
I have found the Microsoft License Advisor application to be valuable when considering different scenarios and options for a new project.
Tips for using it:
- Access here: http://mla.microsoft.com
- Select Guided Quote > select Step-by-Step Wizard > select Next to get to the Pick a Product screen, and then select SharePoint Server (you may need to scroll down the list for this).
- The system will display a screen allowing you to enter the number of servers for your new solution. It also allows for estimating both Standard and Enterprise CAL users. Tip: For estimating purposes you may want to use Users and not Devices. While you may want to include Software Assurance with your licenses, for this exercise you may also want to use License Only to get your baseline costs.
- Selecting Next will calculate your SWAG. Tip: Confirm you see both server and CAL licenses on your quote total.
Look like SharePoint 2013 is in your budget and may be an option? We hope you feel you have a better understanding of how SharePoint licensing is structured and a ballpark price for your project. At this point we highly encourage you to contact a Microsoft License Advisors to work through all the details and get some official licensing quotes for further budgeting decisions.
Other Good References
Sajan Parihar did an excellent job with his presentation Overview of SharePoint Licensing at this years SharePoint Conference in Las Vegas. If you have an hour to watch the entire presentation, it is great way to quickly get a solid understanding on the licensing for SharePoint 2013. You can download the PowerPoint here, or watch the video below.
When you click on the convert farm license type Link, you will be landed on convert license type page. This page will give you the option to change the License type from Standard to enterprise or from trail to regular.
Convert license type page’s direct link: /_admin/Conversion.aspx
There is a situation when you have to change the product key of SharePoint farm. For example
1.You have SharePoint Server with Standard client access license; now you want to use the enterprise features for which you have to convert your license type from Standard to the enterprise.
2.You use the SharePoint 2016 trial product key (valid for 180 days) and which is going to expire and you want to upgrade it to your regular key.
In that type of situation, you do not need to uninstall the SharePoint and reinstall with the correct key, rather you just need the valid key. From central admin, you can update the product key from trial to regular or from standard to enterprise edition of the SharePoint. SharePoint Binaries are same for the Standard or enterprise or even trail version.
Most important thing, keep in mind, you can go from lower version to higher but cannot go from Higher to lower.
If you have SharePoint Standard then you can upgrade it to SharePoint Enterprise
If you are on SharePoint Standard Trail then you can go regular SharePoint Standard or Enterprise
If you are in the SharePoint Enterprise edition then you cannot go to SharePoint standard or trail.
If you are on SharePoint Enterprise Trail then you can go only regular SharePoint Enterprise edition.
Going from Higher to lower version. You have to install SharePoint with the standard product key on the new server. From existing farm, turn off the enterprise features from site collection then restore it to new standard farm. This method is not supported, as this method can bring some orphan stuff with it. The best way is to use 3rd party tool or manually move the content to new farm.
Note: Product key cannot be retrieved from SharePoint once configured it, you have to store it secure place manually. Even if you lost the key it really does not matter, as long as you give the proof to MSFT that you hold the valid licensing, which covers servers and users.
Convert License Type
In order to change the license type, you need a fresh Product key for the desired License type (i.e. going standard to enterprise then you need valid 25-character long enterprise key or from trial to regular). Please follow the steps below to change license type.
- Login to Central admin with account member of farm administrator group and also the local admin on the server.
- On this Page enter the correct Product key and click Ok.
- Now, wait for the couple minutes as it is updating it.
As per my experience, it is really great if we perform the IIS reset on the all the servers in the farm. So that nothing stuck in the cache.
This concludes the session and we successfully convert the license type from Standard to an enterprise.