Hello everyone, this is John Pocknell with Quest Software and I'm going to walk you through, real quick, how to use the Quest Toad Benefits Calculator. So this is a tool that's going to help you calculate the return on investment and payback period and net present value of an investment in Toad for Oracle, whether it's for a development team or a DBA team, or both. This is a quick and easy to use tool that can be accessed from the product page on quest.com.
So if you go to quest.com/products/ toad-for-oracle, there's a button there, Justify Your Toad, and that will take straight to this calculator. This tool applies to Toad for Oracle, which is the world's number one Oracle IDE, and it applies to the term license version where you're buying a term license over three years. Doesn't apply to subscription version-- there's a subscription version of Toad for Oracle-- this doesn't apply to that. And so you'll get a quick and easy to use report of what that investment will look like. I'm going to go ahead and take the assessment.
So first of all, we need some information about your company and the size of your development DBA team. So I'm going to go ahead and put in my company name here.
Industry-- let's say IT services. The location of your company-- is pretty global, as you can see. And your primary platform-- might be Oracle, might be some other platform. And then on the right hand side it wants information about your set up. So your DBA's team size, your developer team size. You can, if you're just interested in investment on the developer tools for using Toad for Oracle, then you can just leave it at zero for DBAs and vice versa, if it's the DBA team that you're looking to make an investment for, then leave the developers at 0. So I'm going to do both, actually.
Say we have a fairly small team of 30 developers and we have two DBAs, so it's a fairly small organization. Number of end users-- this basically means the number of people that are using the application or the database that excludes developing DBAs and other people at the non-production, preproduction side. So let's say 500 end users. And then on the-- some information about the application that you're supporting. So the number of application launches or upgrades that you have a year. This can be-- this is a sliding scale, so you can just slide this scale and just say, OK, in my case I've got, let's say four launches or upgrades per year.
And the number of development months of release. What's the length of your software development lifecycle? We're still using Waterfall in our company, so let's go with two months. It may be more than that, may be less than that. If it's Agile, probably a lot less than that, right? And then an estimate of the annual business value per launch. How much business value are you providing every time you make release or upgrade the application? Again, it'll just be an estimate-- I've put 10,000 in there. OK.
And then some information about downtime because using Toad for Oracle, you're going to be able to experience less downtime because you'll have a higher quality building-- a higher quality application that performs better, scales faster. That's the goal. So the number of current-- this is your current state. How many unplanned downtime issues do you get a year that require development involvement? So let's be optimistic, say, four. Number of hours, typically, to respond to each of these issues. All right, so I want to go with roughly two hours, and that's it.
And then there's some detailed assumptions as well. Now these cover things like, how do your developing DBAs actually spend their time? What are they paid? How many hours a week do they work? And these are drawn from industry averages, but you can go into each of these and you can get information about how we've arrived at this number and you can go in and edit the number, if you so wish. So I'm just going to edit one of them, which is the amount of time that DBAs spend on database performance, because I feel like 10% is a little on the low side. I know my DBAs are spending a lot longer than that on tuning SQL, and you can tweak any of these other numbers as well. So I'll close that.
And that's it, as far as this is concerned. I can go ahead and click Results and I'll get a Results Summary, and the Results Summary is telling me what my return investment is over three years, the net present value, and the payback period over that three-year period. In order to get a more detailed analysis I need to provide some personal information because we can email you a PDF version of this report that you can then use as part of your business case, which I'm sure you'll need to do. You'll need to present this information to your executives if you're looking to make an investment in Toad for Oracle.
So I'm going to go ahead and fill this information in here, and email address, job title, and city. I'm based in the UK, so-- and make sure you put all this data in because otherwise you won't be able to process. And zip code, or in my case, a post code. And that's it.
So now I'm going to go ahead and see Results, and now I get a detailed version of this. I get all this other information that's been calculated. The Results Summary still on the right hand side, but it's got a bit more information. It's broken down into different sections according to what options you selected at the beginning, and then it's got, also, information about what these terms mean, if you're not