Strategy

What Pricing Models Work for Enterprise Distribution Deployments?

Enterprise distribution pricing: annual contracts, dedicated device fleets, per-account volume tiers, and SLAs for uptime, compliance, and attribution.

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Enterprise distribution deployments use annual contracts with dedicated device fleets, per-account volume tiers, and premium SLAs for uptime, compliance, and attribution, typically starting at $3,000-8,000 monthly and scaling based on account count and infrastructure requirements. Enterprise deployment pricing differs from standard managed distribution in three ways: dedicated infrastructure, contractual guarantees, and integration depth with the enterprise's existing marketing and analytics stack.

What Makes Enterprise Distribution Different?

Enterprise brands need dedicated infrastructure. Shared device fleets used by smaller deployments do not meet enterprise security, compliance, or brand-safety requirements. Each enterprise deployment gets its own physical device infrastructure, its own account isolation protocols, and its own data separation. The premium over standard pricing covers the infrastructure dedication.

Enterprise compliance requirements add another layer. Financial services, healthcare-adjacent, and regulated B2B brands need distribution infrastructure that meets their internal compliance and auditing standards. This means documented warmup protocols, per-account activity logs, and content approval workflows that integrate with the enterprise's existing compliance systems.

What Does Enterprise Pricing Cover?

Enterprise distribution pricing typically covers dedicated real-device infrastructure (not shared or virtualized), custom account warmup protocols tailored to the enterprise's risk tolerance and platform mix, integration with the enterprise's attribution and analytics stack so distribution performance is visible alongside paid media, named account management and support with defined response times, and SLAs on account uptime, posting cadence, and compliance reporting.

The Enterprise marketing spend analysis, driven by brands recognizing that organic distribution infrastructure is a competitive requirement, not an optional channel.

How Should Enterprises Budget for Distribution?

Enterprise distribution should be budgeted as infrastructure, not as marketing spend. The monthly cost of $3,000-15,000 for managed distribution across 50-200 accounts is comparable to one or two full-time social media hires. The comparison is not about cost. It is about output: a managed infrastructure deployment produces reach across 100 accounts with consistent behavioral signal. An in-house team produces reach across 20-30 accounts with human reliability gaps.

How Conbersa Structures Enterprise Distribution

We built Conbersa to support enterprise deployments with dedicated device fleets, custom warmup protocols, platform-specific compliance, and full attribution integration. Our real-device autonomous AI agent infrastructure scales to enterprise requirements while maintaining the anti-detection advantages that only physical devices provide. Enterprise distribution from $3,000/month at conbersa.ai.

Neil Ruaro
Founder, Conbersa

We run agentic distribution on a fleet of real phones — and write up what we learn helping founders escape the cold start. Got a topic you want covered? Tell us.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Enterprise distribution pricing uses annual contracts with dedicated device fleets, per-account volume tiers (50-200+ accounts), and premium SLAs covering uptime, compliance auditing, and multi-touch attribution. Enterprise pricing typically starts at $3,000-8,000 monthly and scales to $15,000+ for large deployments with dedicated infrastructure and support.
Enterprise pricing includes dedicated rather than shared device infrastructure, custom compliance and security protocols, integration with existing marketing and analytics stacks, named support and account management, and contractual SLAs with uptime and performance guarantees. The premium over standard pricing covers these enterprise-specific requirements.
Enterprises should look for dedicated device infrastructure, platform-specific compliance guarantees, data isolation between business units, attribution integration with existing analytics, and clear SLA terms on account uptime, warmup timelines, and posting cadence. Avoid shared-infrastructure pricing for enterprise deployments with regulatory or brand-safety requirements.
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