Pricing Model
PEPM Modular
Per-employee-per-month priced per active module (WFM, Talent, Learn, TA)
Typical Contract Length
3–5 Years
SumTotal pushes 5-year terms; 3-year with protection clauses is a reasonable compromise
Discount Range
25%–45%
Off published rates with competitive leverage and multi-module bundling
Renewal Notice
90–180 Days
Miss the window and SumTotal contracts auto-renew at escalated rates

This article is part of the Enterprise HR / HCM Pricing Guide, our comprehensive benchmark of what enterprises actually pay across every major HCM platform. SumTotal Systems — acquired by Cornerstone OnDemand in 2020 and now part of the Cornerstone portfolio — remains one of the most common HCM platforms in workforce-heavy industries like manufacturing, healthcare, retail, and regulated financial services. It is also one of the most under-benchmarked, because SumTotal pricing is rarely published, rarely discussed publicly, and rarely challenged by buyers who assume they have limited leverage.

The benchmark data in this article is drawn from analysis of 500+ vendors and more than $2.1B in enterprise contracts. SumTotal contracts deserve careful scrutiny: published-rate proposals routinely come in 25% to 45% above what comparable enterprises actually pay, and renewal escalator clauses embedded in multi-year SumTotal agreements are consistently the highest-value target for negotiation.

SumTotal HCM Pricing Model Explained

SumTotal is sold today as four connected but independently licensable modules: SumTotal Workforce Management (time, absence, and complex scheduling), SumTotal Talent Development (learning and development, originally the company's flagship), SumTotal Talent Acquisition (recruiting), and SumTotal Payroll (more limited in geographic scope than ADP, Ceridian, or Workday). Most enterprises license two or three modules rather than the full suite, and the pricing model reflects that.

The pricing engine is per-employee-per-month (PEPM) for most modules, priced by active headcount that touches the platform. SumTotal Learn historically priced by registered learner counts — a distinction that still appears in some legacy contracts where a 30,000-employee organization pays for 30,000 learners regardless of how many are actively using the system in a given month. This legacy structure is a negotiation opportunity during any contract renewal.

Implementation is always priced separately, and SumTotal implementations consistently cost more than buyers expect. Large rollouts spanning Workforce Management and Talent Development frequently run 12–24 months and generate professional services fees equal to 60%–120% of the first-year subscription total. That implementation-to-subscription ratio is a red flag, and one of the most common sources of post-signature buyer's remorse for SumTotal customers.

How SumTotal Structures the Proposal

A typical SumTotal enterprise proposal contains: module subscription fees (PEPM × headcount × 12 for each active module), implementation professional services, data migration services, ongoing managed services (optional), integration development fees, and annual support/maintenance where applicable for legacy on-premise customers. The SumTotal SaaS contract bundles support into the subscription; the on-premise contract — still in use at some regulated-industry customers — charges 20%–22% annual maintenance on license value.

What Enterprises Actually Pay for SumTotal HCM

SumTotal published rates are not publicly disclosed. Cornerstone's strategy since acquisition has been to hold pricing at SumTotal's legacy levels while steering new-logo business toward the core Cornerstone Learning and Talent platforms. That dynamic matters: SumTotal retention is now more about customer inertia than competitive price position, and SumTotal reps are empowered to defend the installed base aggressively during competitive renewal cycles. Based on benchmarked contracts, typical enterprise pricing looks like this:

Organization Size Module Configuration Typical PEPM Range Annual Platform Cost
1,000–5,000 employees Workforce Management only $6–$12 PEPM $72K–$720K
5,000–15,000 employees WFM + Talent Development $9–$18 PEPM $540K–$3.2M
15,000–40,000 employees WFM + Talent Development + Talent Acquisition $12–$22 PEPM $2.2M–$10.5M
40,000+ employees (global) Full suite including Payroll (US-only) $14–$25 PEPM $6.7M+

The range inside each size band is unusually wide because SumTotal's pricing has drifted over two decades of acquisitions and product repositioning. Two enterprises of identical size with identical module footprints can pay rates 60% apart from one another simply because of when their contract was signed and which SumTotal sales team owned the account.

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SumTotal Discount Benchmarks — What's Achievable?

Discount ranges on SumTotal contracts consistently track higher than most enterprise HCM platforms because the platform has lost competitive ground in the new-deal market and Cornerstone's overall strategic priority is customer retention rather than margin protection. Benchmarked discount outcomes:

  • New-logo deals: 25%–45% off proposed rates are realistic with competitive leverage from Workday, UKG Pro, or Ceridian Dayforce. SumTotal reps will not lead with their best number; the first proposal is typically 15%–20% above their walk-away rate.
  • Renewal discounts: 10%–25% off at renewal is achievable when the buyer runs a documented competitive process. Without that process, renewals default to a 5%–8% annual uplift that compounds quickly across a 3–5 year term.
  • Multi-module bundle discounts: 15%–30% additional discount for bundling WFM + Talent Development + Talent Acquisition in a single deal. Buyers who license modules serially rather than in a bundle consistently pay 20%–35% more over a 5-year window.
  • Multi-year commitments: 8%–15% additional discount for 5-year versus 3-year terms. This is one of the few places where longer commitments genuinely pay the buyer back — but only if paired with renewal protection language (see below).

SumTotal Pricing by Module

SumTotal Workforce Management

The time, absence, and scheduling module — often the reason enterprises buy SumTotal in the first place. Priced at $4–$10 PEPM depending on scale and feature activation (advanced scheduling, union rules, predictive analytics). Workforce Management is where SumTotal still holds genuine competitive differentiation against general-purpose HCM vendors, particularly for heavily unionized workforces and 24/7 operations.

SumTotal Talent Development (Learning)

SumTotal's flagship module historically and still the largest revenue contributor. Priced at $3–$9 PEPM with heavy bundle discounting. Legacy per-learner pricing persists in older contracts and is frequently 30%–50% more expensive than current per-active-employee structures. Every SumTotal Learn contract renewal should start with a per-user-model-change proposal.

SumTotal Talent Acquisition

The recruiting module is SumTotal's weakest relative to modern ATS alternatives like Jobvite, Greenhouse, or iCIMS. Priced at $4–$10 PEPM but often discounted heavily to avoid losing the module to a competitor in a renewal cycle. If you are paying more than $6 PEPM for SumTotal TA and you have an ATS-market competitive benchmark in hand, there is 25%+ of price to recover.

SumTotal Payroll

The most limited module, with strong US capabilities but narrow international coverage. Priced at $6–$15 PEPM. Global enterprises typically supplement SumTotal Payroll with ADP GlobalView or a regional payroll partner, which fragments the vendor stack and undermines the "single HCM platform" value proposition.

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Common SumTotal Contract Traps to Watch For

SumTotal paper contains several clauses that consistently cost enterprise buyers significant money if left unmodified. These are the ones we see most often in benchmarked contracts:

  • Uncapped annual escalators. Default SumTotal contracts include a 5%–8% annual price increase with no cap tied to CPI or any external benchmark. Over a 5-year term that compounds to a 28%–47% total increase. Push for a 3% cap or CPI-linked escalator with a 3% ceiling.
  • Auto-renewal with short notice windows. 90- or 180-day pre-expiration notice requirements are standard. Miss the window and the contract auto-renews at the escalated rate for another full term. Track this in the contract calendar and start renewal work 12–18 months ahead of expiration.
  • Learner-count pricing traps. Older SumTotal Learn contracts may price by registered learner, not active user. If your organization has had significant attrition or consolidation, you may be paying for tens of thousands of phantom learners. Every renewal should include a headcount true-up clause.
  • Module bundle-to-standalone repricing. SumTotal contracts routinely include language that allows the vendor to reprice individual modules if one module is dropped. Dropping a low-value module can mechanically re-rate the remaining modules upward — sometimes by 25%+. Push for protection language that locks per-module rates independently of bundle composition.
  • Managed services lock-in. The SumTotal managed services engagement frequently contains its own auto-renewal, its own escalators, and its own termination-for-convenience fees that are separate from the subscription contract. A clean SumTotal exit requires unwinding both contracts in parallel.

SumTotal Renewal Pricing: What Changes and What Doesn't

SumTotal renewal pricing behavior has changed meaningfully since the Cornerstone acquisition. The pre-2020 SumTotal was willing to take aggressive price cuts at renewal to avoid customer churn. The Cornerstone-era SumTotal treats retention as a margin opportunity: the renewal conversation opens with an 8%+ ask, supported by a thin deliverable ("refreshed UX", "expanded content library") that is presented as added value to justify the increase.

What does not change automatically at renewal: base rates (unless you renegotiate them), discount percentages (they reset to zero on each renewal unless specifically preserved in contract language), escalator caps, and module pricing structures. What changes at renewal automatically unless you prevent it: list rates (always up), product bundles (SumTotal will reposition your modules into updated SKUs that may or may not match your legacy configuration), and the customer success team (account leadership turnover inside SumTotal remains high, and every new rep starts by re-establishing pricing baselines).

The single highest-value renewal move is establishing a documented competitive benchmark 9–12 months ahead of expiration. SumTotal pricing behavior shifts visibly when the account team sees a credible alternative in the buyer's evaluation set, and that shift alone tends to move the renewal from a 6%–8% increase to a 5%–15% decrease.

SumTotal Negotiation Playbook: Tactics That Actually Work

Enterprise SumTotal negotiations reward buyers who understand the vendor's internal incentive structure. The Cornerstone parent company measures SumTotal retention as a first-order KPI because the SumTotal installed base is the primary strategic asset in the acquisition — not the new-logo pipeline. That dynamic changes which negotiation tactics work and which do not.

Tactic 1: Anchor on Benchmark Data, Not List Price

SumTotal reps open with proposals anchored to the vendor's internal "target price" model, which embeds a 15%–20% buffer above the true walk-away rate. Buyers who anchor their counter on benchmark data — specifically on what comparable enterprises with similar module footprints and employee counts actually pay — neutralize the list-price anchor and reset the conversation around achievable pricing. Benchmark data is most effective when presented with context: size band, module configuration, and contract vintage.

Tactic 2: Separate Subscription, Implementation, and Managed Services Negotiations

SumTotal reps prefer bundled negotiations because bundling obscures where concessions are coming from. A 20% "discount" applied to the total deal value may concentrate in implementation services (where the vendor has the largest markup) while leaving subscription rates near list. Separate the three negotiation streams explicitly: subscription PEPM, implementation SOW, and managed services. Force discount commitments to each stream independently.

Tactic 3: Use Renewal Protection Language as a Pricing Lever

If SumTotal resists base-rate concessions, redirect the negotiation toward escalator caps, capability protection clauses, and module repricing protection. These protections are often easier for the vendor to accept than headline rate cuts, and their cumulative five-year value frequently exceeds the equivalent headline discount. A 3% escalator cap on a $3M contract protects $390K over five years versus a 7% uncapped default.

Tactic 4: Leverage Q4 and Fiscal Year-End Timing

Cornerstone's fiscal year ends December 31. Q4 (October–December) is Cornerstone's most aggressive quarter for new deal discounting and renewal retention. SumTotal account teams under quarterly quota pressure have measurably more discount flexibility in Q4 than in Q1 or Q2. For renewals, Q4 timing on a 3-year+ contract creates leverage; starting renewal negotiation in Q3 for a Q4 close is the single most common timing play in SumTotal deals.

Tactic 5: Bring an Alternative Into the Evaluation

The single highest-value SumTotal negotiation tactic is a documented competitive evaluation. Workday, UKG Pro, Ceridian Dayforce, and Cornerstone's own Learn platform are the most credible alternatives depending on which SumTotal modules are in scope. Even a preliminary evaluation — vendor demos, RFP shortlist, documented buyer evaluation criteria — shifts SumTotal pricing behavior materially because the account team's retention KPI is in play. Buyers who do not run any form of competitive process routinely pay 15%–25% more than buyers who run even a light-touch evaluation.

Combine these five tactics in parallel. They are not alternatives — they reinforce one another, and buyers who deploy all five consistently land at the bottom end of the achievable discount range.

Which Enterprises Get the Most Value From SumTotal HCM

SumTotal's competitive positioning is narrower than generalist HCM competitors. For some enterprise buyer profiles the platform delivers genuine differentiated value; for others the platform has become a legacy liability that should be migrated out of at the next renewal cycle. Understanding where your organization sits on this spectrum is essential for making the right build/retain/replace decision at contract time.

Strong SumTotal fit: Manufacturing, healthcare, and retail organizations with complex 24/7 scheduling requirements, heavy union workforce components, and multi-shift operations where Workforce Management depth materially outperforms alternatives. Regulated-industry learning and compliance training operations with long-tenure SumTotal Learn deployments and deep custom content libraries. Public-sector and government contractor deployments where SumTotal's compliance reporting and audit support have been customized over multi-year timeframes.

Weaker SumTotal fit: Knowledge-worker-dominant enterprises with straightforward salaried workforces where Workforce Management depth is unused. Organizations where recruiting is a strategic priority — SumTotal Talent Acquisition consistently underperforms modern ATS alternatives, and the module cost is rarely justified against the gap. Global enterprises with significant non-US workforce, where SumTotal Payroll's limited geographic coverage forces vendor fragmentation that undermines the single-platform value proposition.

If your organization sits clearly in the "weaker fit" category, the negotiation question shifts from "how much discount can we secure?" to "when should we migrate out and to which alternative?" Building a 12–18 month migration plan to Workday, UKG Pro, or Cornerstone's core Learn platform frequently produces better five-year economics than successive renewal negotiations with a platform that is not the right strategic fit.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does SumTotal HCM cost per employee?

SumTotal HCM pricing typically runs $6–$22 PEPM depending on which modules are licensed. A single module (Workforce Management or Talent Development) usually falls in the $6–$12 PEPM range. A three-module suite (WFM + Talent Development + Talent Acquisition) typically runs $12–$22 PEPM. Enterprise-scale deployments above 15,000 employees consistently negotiate to the lower end of each range.

How does SumTotal compare to Cornerstone OnDemand on price?

Since Cornerstone OnDemand acquired SumTotal in 2020, the two platforms are sold by the same company but at different price points. Cornerstone's core Learning platform typically prices 15%–25% below SumTotal Talent Development for comparable functional scope. SumTotal's differentiated value today is in Workforce Management — an area where Cornerstone does not compete directly. Buyers who only need learning should compare both offerings; buyers who need complex scheduling often have no near-term alternative to SumTotal WFM within the Cornerstone portfolio.

What discount can enterprises negotiate on SumTotal?

SumTotal discounts of 25%–45% off initial proposed rates are routinely achievable for enterprises of 5,000+ employees with documented competitive alternatives in the evaluation. Renewal discounts of 10%–25% are possible when the buyer runs a structured competitive process 12+ months before contract expiration. Organizations that simply accept the vendor's initial renewal proposal consistently pay 20%+ above benchmark.

Is SumTotal HCM still being actively developed?

Yes, though development investment since the Cornerstone acquisition has concentrated on Workforce Management and integration between SumTotal and core Cornerstone platforms. Talent Acquisition and Payroll modules receive less product investment than competitor platforms, which matters for buyers weighing a 5-year commitment. Factor roadmap confidence into your negotiation — vendors who cannot articulate a credible product roadmap deserve price concessions to reflect that risk.

What is the typical SumTotal implementation timeline?

Single-module SumTotal implementations (Workforce Management or Talent Development only) typically take 4–8 months for a 5,000-employee organization. Multi-module rollouts spanning three or more modules across a 15,000+ employee enterprise routinely run 12–24 months. Professional services fees commonly equal 60%–120% of first-year subscription value, and timeline slippage is a recurring driver of unplanned change-order fees. Fix-fee implementations with clear milestone payments protect the buyer better than time-and-materials structures.

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