Agreements
AWS Marketplace seller agreements are contracts between sellers and buyers for products sold on AWS Marketplace. An agreement is formed when a buyer accepts an offer, which can be either public or private. This section explains these agreement types and statuses in detail.
Agreement types
There are three types of agreements in AWS Marketplace.
Public offer agreements – The standard, non-negotiated legal agreements buyers accept when purchasing publicly listed products from sellers on AWS Marketplace.
Private offer agreements – A private offer that the buyer accepted becomes an agreement. For more information, refer to Creating and managing private offers.
Future dated agreements – The buyer receives the product license or entitlement on a predetermined future date. For more information, refer to Creating future dated agreements for private offers.
Working with agreements
You view and manage agreements from the Agreements page in the AWS Marketplace Management Portal. On the Agreements page, the Agreements table shows the contracts for products you sell in AWS Marketplace. In the Agreements table, an agreement can have one of the following statuses:
Active – The terms of the agreement are active.
Expiring – The contract will expire in less than 90 days.
Expired – The agreement ended on the defined contract end date.
Renewed – The agreement was renewed, creating a new agreement with updated terms.
Cancelled – The acceptor ended the agreement early.
Replaced – The agreement was replaced using an agreement replacement offer.
Terminated – The agreement was terminated by AWS before the original contract end date for a reason such as a payment failure.
Archived – The agreement ended without a specified reason.
Amending agreements in AWS Marketplace
As an AWS Marketplace seller, you can offer upgrades, renewals, and amendments to replace active agreements that you originally created when the buyer accepted your public offer or private offer.
Software as service (SaaS) contract and SaaS contract with consumption products support private offer amendments. All AWS Marketplace sellers can upgrade, renew, or amend private offers for these product types, including independent software vendors (ISVs) and channel partners. The following sections provide information about the process for amending, renewing, and upgrading private offers for SaaS products.
The difference between an offer and an agreement is whether the buyer accepted its terms:
An offer is a set of terms for a buyer's use of a product. Offers can be public or private.
An agreement is an offer that a buyer accepted. Agreements include purchased and free products that a seller made available using a public or private offer.
Supported product types for private offer amendments
Only the following product types support private offer amendments:
SaaS contracts
SaaS contracts with consumption
You can see the following additional product types on the Agreements tab in the AWS Marketplace Management Portal. However, these product types don't support amendments:
SaaS usage-based products
AMI-based products
Container-based products
Server contract
Professional services products
Creating private offer upgrades, renewals, and amendments
You can create private offer upgrades, renewals, and amendments from the AWS Marketplace Management Portal by using the following procedure. For Channel Partner private offers (CPPO), the Channel Partner can only create agreement-based offers using the currency defined in the resale authorization.
To create private offer upgrades, renewals, and amendments
Sign in to the AWS Marketplace Management Portaland choose Agreements.
On the Agreements page, choose a check box next to an agreement, and then choose View Details.
On the View agreement page, choose Amend agreement.
On the Amend agreement details page, sellers must indicate whether a private offer is for a renewal. Select Yes or No when asked if the private offer is for a renewal.
Note
You can also make changes to service dates, product dimensions, offer currency, payment schedule, renewal status, and the offer expiration date on the Amend agreement details page.
When you're finished, choose Create offer and then Submit.
Tip
Entering descriptive custom offer names can help you distinguish between your active offers on the Offers page. Custom offer names are also visible to buyers.
AWS recommends that you specify a custom offer name that includes any additional identifying details, such as your own IDs and purchase order numbers. Using high-level descriptions like upgrade or renewal and custom company names are also recommended. Don't use any personally identifiable data (for example, first or last names, phone numbers, or addresses). You can enter up to 150 characters for this field.
Edit the information for any dates, dimensions, payment schedules, and EULAs that you want to change, and then choose Next. On the Review and create page, review the information. When you're ready, choose Create agreement-based offer.
The new private offer appears on the Manage Private Offer page in approximately 45 minutes. To view the offer, sign in to the AWS Marketplace Management Portal and choose Offers to open the Manage Private Offer page.
From there, the buyer has the option to accept it or to continue to operate under the original agreement:
If the buyer accepts the private offer upgrade or renewal, the new agreement takes effect immediately and the agreement is listed on the Agreements page in the AWS Marketplace Management Portal. Any remaining scheduled payments from previous agreements are cancelled.
Buyers accept agreement-based private offers the same way they accept private offers. For more information about the buyer experience for private offers, see Private offers in the AWS Marketplace Buyer Guide.
If the buyer doesn't accept the private offer upgrade or renewal before it expires, the original agreement remains in effect with no changes.
Note
For the Amazon SNS notifications for SaaS products, a subscribe-success message is sent with the new offer-identifier when the buyer accepts the agreement-based offer.
Reporting for upgrades, renewals, and amendments
Upgrade and renewal private offers appear on the existing seller reports and in the reports relevant to the offer. In the Daily customer subscriber report, the Subscription intent field indicates whether the report entry is a new private offer. The Previous offer ID field indicates the ID of the offer that preceded the new offer, if one exists. For all private offers, the entry is marked private.
Important
An agreement-based offer replaces a buyer's current subscription. Existing invoices remain unchanged. However, the payment schedule in the agreement-based offer replaces pending invoices from the previous subscription.
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