Dear Dropbox management, how can we convince you, that making consideration for those of us who have retired and therefore not generating any regular income other than possibly a pension, could be offered a lower cost, smaller capacity storage option, thus maintaining the customers loyalty and regular subscription income for Dropbox.
Because of the successful way that Dropbox works, I'm sure that all those that can't afford to pay 9.99 dollars per month when they retire, would much prefer to remain a loyal and happy Dropbox customer, rather than trying to find a cheaper less secure storage option. If Dropbox decided to make a consideration like this, surely the feedback, appreciation and continued income shown by their retiring loyal customers would be of great value, it could also make a valuable sales comment for New customers that are considering to join Dropbox, as it would display a company that cares about its members throughout their life.
Please do consider this thought, I don't make it lightly, surely not everything in business revolves around profit margins.
I've made a request for something in the middle, just in case. Actually, I'm almost moved to OneDrive. There you have 5GB, and now offer 100GB for 2€-$/month. Besides that, I use it mostly for documents, that can be edited form there, and even Dropbox redirects you to their services if you want to edit your files in their storage. So, as I said there isn't any actual reason to remain in Dropbox. Even Google is a candidate in this case.
for years, I suggest dropbox to provide solutions for plans with smaller quota, such as 200GB, 500GB, 800GB, 1TB, etc. Or, we pay a scaled price based on the 2TB basic plan. This will win over more users from the market.
It would be necessary to have the option for users to incrementally increase their storage space as needed. This could start with a base storage option of, for example, 50GB, and allow users to increase their storage in increments of 50GB or 100GB, as their storage needs change. Additionally, users should have the option to downgrade their storage at any time as well. This way, users only pay for the storage they actually use, giving them more control and flexibility over their storage plans.
Downgrading from 2 TB to 2 GB seems excessive. I'm currently paying for a large amount of unused storage space and it would be more reasonable to have the option to scale down to a storage plan that better fits my usage.
given the lousy support Dropbox give, and stupid pricing plans, their only redeeming feature is File Version recovery, which is far superior to Onedrive, hence I stick with Dropbox.
Shame I don't feel more positive, but the ball's in their Corporate court.
You have 2, 3 or 5 TB storage alternatives to choose from, which is way too much for me and probably many other. You start with 2 GB and are right away expected to have a need of at least 2 TB, since that is the lowest possible storage alternative for 10 €/month.
Why not have some more "budget, light" alternatives, like 10, 20, 50, 100 and 500 GB? That would be more interesting.
I have also asked them to offer more storage alternatives, for many years now. To go from the basic 2 GB to a whopping 2000 GB is ridiculous. There should of course be more alternatives in between, at a lower cost. I wonder if this would ever be possible to get.