DocuSign supports transactions with document sharing and electronic signature, as well as automated and guided data collection and entry, record updating across disparate systems and payment collection upon agreement, as well as analytics and reporting.
$15
per month
Juro
Score 8.0 out of 10
Mid-Size Companies (51-1,000 employees)
Juro is a contract collaboration platform that enables businesses to self-serve, agree and manage contracts and their data in one unified workspace. Juro's no-code editor is designed to turn contracts into actionable data, giving users control and visibility at every moment, and empowering teams to self-serve on contracts from what the vendor describes as a beautiful interface that anyone can use.
$450
Per month, minimum 5 users
Pricing
DocuSign
Juro
Editions & Modules
Personal
$15
per month
Real Starter
$15
per month
DocuSign for Realtors
$35
per month
Standard
$40
per month
Business Pro
$60
per month
Advanced Solutions
Custom Pricing
Lite
$450.00
Per month, minimum 5 users
Team
$990.00
Per month, minimum 10 users
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
DocuSign
Juro
Free Trial
Yes
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
No
Yes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
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More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
DocuSign
Juro
Features
DocuSign
Juro
Contract Authoring
Comparison of Contract Authoring features of Product A and Product B
DocuSign
-
Ratings
Juro
8.7
Ratings
9% above category average
Contract creation
00 Ratings
9.00 Ratings
Contract templates
00 Ratings
10.00 Ratings
Clause library/saved fields
00 Ratings
7.00 Ratings
Contract Collaboration
Comparison of Contract Collaboration features of Product A and Product B
DocuSign
-
Ratings
Juro
7.5
Ratings
10% below category average
Contract sharing
00 Ratings
8.00 Ratings
Contract editing
00 Ratings
6.00 Ratings
Collaborating on contracts
00 Ratings
8.00 Ratings
Approval process
00 Ratings
8.00 Ratings
Contract Monitoring
Comparison of Contract Monitoring features of Product A and Product B
I am going to speak of a personal experience- on multiple occasions: I need my husband to sign documents during the day and I don't need him here- physically. He sometimes works in different parts of the state as well at his own company. There is no problem at all, as long as he has access to his cell phone, email, and cell phone service- he can sign the documents I need him to. It is AMAZING- I can't speak highly enough of Docusign.
Juro is a great platform if you have a mess of managing and keeping track of contracts. With Juro, creating, sharing and tracking the contracts have been so easy
You have to purchase a subscription and unless you really need to originate a lot of documents, it's not cost-effective to maintain the subscription. It would be better to have a subscription that allows you to purchase a bundle of say, ten documents and then use them as needed for the occasional user.
You'll be hard-pressed to find anything negative from users other than the price.
The product is a great tool for a remote workforce. As the company gets bigger, adding users to the account can be rather expensive. We considering providing read/sign only access for certain individuals and providing full access to other users as necessary to reduce costs.
As an Administrator of the system, its ease of configuration and the guidance around doing it is second to none. The screens are broken down into manageable segments and easy to navigate to the area that needs to be looked at. Our Process Delivery teams, after initial training are using the system without any problems and find it easy to operation. We get minimal if any, requests for support.
I'd give them a 10, but there has been 1 or 2 small cases that seemed to fall to the wayside, but I was able to call them up and get them resolved. We were having a bad implementation night (after midnight) and we needed assistance from Docusign. They were able to get an engineer to help us in the early morning hours
Docusign is super easy to use, and apart from a few administration details, there was really nothing to train on. Post implementation, there were issues with configuration of auto-filled documents with the integrating 3rd party. That training required some time, because the DocuSign expert took the time to walk me through the 3rd party's configuration (how often does that happen?) so I could see how DocuSign should be best used to overcome weaknesses in the 3rd party platform. 10/10 expert care.
Until you get the hang of it, I recommend doing several internal tests before sending a document to a client. As I mentioned earlier, you have to go through a bit of trial and error at first to verify that the workflow works as expected.
Adobe Acrobat Sign is less user-friendly and more suited to small scopes, or one-off documents. It lacks the use of templates that DocuSign has, which is what ultimately streamlines and delivers the consistency and efficiencies for the business.