Workday Prism Analytics — the Tableau-style platform that ingests Workday + external data — is priced on data volume tiers, user seat counts, and Discovery Board licensing. The volume tiers are wildly miscalibrated for most enterprises, creating a large gap between licensed capacity and used capacity. We measure that gap and renegotiate accordingly.
Workday Prism's commercial design assumes massive data ingestion volumes that almost no customer actually reaches in year one. Most clients license at Tier 3 or 4 because Workday's deal desk recommends it, then operate at Tier 1 or 2 for the contract's full term. We measure your actual data volume against your licensed capacity and renegotiate the tier — typically before the next renewal cycle. The levers below consistently move Prism deals.
Pull 12 months of ingestion logs. Compare to licensed tier. We've cut Prism subscriptions 28-42% by right-sizing the tier alone.
Discovery Board author seats are expensive; viewer seats are inexpensive. Most clients over-license authors. We audit and reclassify.
Office Connect is bundled by default. Many clients use it lightly or not at all. We unbundle and right-size.
Workday quietly charges for non-Workday data sources connected through Prism. We negotiate flat-rate per source instead of tiered.
Prism co-termed with HCM and FINS creates a three-module bundle that's negotiated as one. Workday discounts deeper for integrated bundles.
Most Prism contracts allow upward tier movement only. We negotiate downward step-down rights for years two and three.
Scoped deliverables. Predictable cost. You know the fee before we start. Benchmarks, redline strategy, and live deal support across every Prism SKU, integration, and professional services line item.
Zero upfront cost. Our fee is a percentage of verified, documented Prism savings over baseline. No savings, no fee. Aligned incentives, end-to-end.
We were on Prism Tier 4 'because we'll grow into it'. After eighteen months we were still at 14% of tier capacity. The tier reset alone was $280K annual savings.
Prism is priced on three axes: annual data ingestion volume (tiered), Discovery Board user seats (author vs viewer), and add-on modules like Office Connect. The tiered ingestion volume is where most over-licensing occurs; the seat math is where the second-largest gap lives.
Roughly 70% of the Prism customers we benchmark operate at Tier 1 or Tier 2 for the contract's full term. Workday's deal desk routinely recommends Tier 3 or 4 for 'future state growth' that doesn't materialize. We size the tier to actuals plus a 25% headroom buffer.
Only if you've validated a real use case. Office Connect is bundled into many Prism deals automatically; usage data frequently shows under 10% adoption. We unbundle and right-size at every renewal.
Yes, but the leverage is materially weaker. Prism on its own paper gives Workday's deal desk more pricing latitude because the bundle math disappears. Co-termed with HCM and FINS, Prism rides on the broader discount curve.
Discovery Board seats are tiered (author vs viewer) with a 4-8x price differential. Most organizations over-license authors. The right ratio is typically 1 author per 8-15 viewers; many clients run 1:2. We reclassify based on usage logs.
On renewal, immediately — the tier reset is contractual. Mid-term, it depends on the agreement. Some Prism contracts allow downward tier movement at quarterly intervals; most do not. We negotiate step-down rights into every new agreement.
Monthly intelligence on Workday pricing, renewal tactics, and module-specific benchmarks. Used by Workday customers in 32 countries.