

LiveFlow pricing looks simple on the surface: a subscription that scales with entities, users, and reporting complexity. But once you add multi-entity consolidation, departmental rollups, and currency conversions, the bill can swing hundreds or thousands of dollars a month.
Teams end up buried in spreadsheets, trying to answer basic questions: What happens if we add three new entities? How will cash flow forecasting costs change if we upgrade support? Which plan keeps our A P and A R reporting fast but affordable?
This is where Google Sheets and Excel shine. They are the canvas where finance, sales, and agency leaders already think in models. When you layer LiveFlow data on top, you can compare scenarios, benchmark against alternatives, and defend every dollar.
Now imagine delegating the grunt work to an AI computer agent. Instead of manually copying prices from sites, reconciling notes from sales calls, and refreshing project reporting assumptions, the agent reads the pricing pages, updates your models, and flags when a different tier would be cheaper. You keep the strategic judgment. The agent handles the clicks, scrolls, and cell edits that used to eat your week.
Before automations and agents, most finance and agency leaders map LiveFlow pricing manually in Google Sheets or Excel. Done well, this still works; it is just slow.
Pros of manual methods
Cons
No-code tools can keep your LiveFlow pricing models fresher without writing code.
Pros of no-code automations
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Manual and no-code methods help, but you still have humans in the loop for repetitive digital work. This is exactly what a Simular AI agent is built to handle.
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Pros
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By combining your familiar tools, Google Sheets and Excel, with a capable Simular AI agent, you get both transparency and leverage: a pricing engine that stays accurate at scale, without you living inside spreadsheets.
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Start by structuring your LiveFlow pricing model around the drivers that actually move your bill: number of entities, users, and any advanced features or support tiers. In Google Sheets or Excel, create a Pricing Inputs tab where you manually capture base subscription, per entity fees, and add ons. Then build an Assumptions tab where you list your current and projected entities by quarter, plus expected user counts or departments using LiveFlow. Use formulas to link inputs to assumptions. For example, multiply entity counts by per entity prices, then add the base subscription. Create several columns for scenarios such as current, growth, and aggressive expansion. Finally, add a summary dashboard with monthly and annual totals. This structure makes it easy to adjust one driver and instantly see how your LiveFlow spend responds, instead of guessing from a single quote.
Open a new Google Sheet and start with three tabs: Inputs, Assumptions, and Summary. In Inputs, list each LiveFlow tier with columns for plan name, base price, included entities, per extra entity price, and any support or reporting add ons. In Assumptions, capture how many entities you operate, which plan each will be on, and expected upgrades such as multi entity consolidation or budgeting and forecasting. Use VLOOKUP or INDEX MATCH to pull plan details from Inputs into Assumptions based on the chosen plan name. Then calculate monthly and annual costs per entity and roll them up per department. In Summary, use SUMIFS to aggregate totals and build charts that show cost growth over time. Share the Sheet with stakeholders, so they can tweak assumptions without touching formulas. This turns Sheets into a living calculator for LiveFlow pricing decisions.
Create a vendor comparison sheet in either Google Sheets or Excel. In the first tab, Vendors, list LiveFlow and its main alternatives in rows. Add columns for base price, per entity structure, data sources supported, AI features, support level, and contract terms. In a second tab, Requirements, define your must haves: number of entities, required integrations, reporting complexity, and budget ceiling. Use formulas to calculate effective monthly cost per entity and cost per key feature for each vendor. You can assign weights to criteria such as data breadth or support responsiveness and compute a weighted score. Finally, build a simple dashboard that ranks tools by score and highlights which vendors fit within your target price band. This approach makes LiveFlow pricing easier to judge in context, rather than in isolation on a sales call.
Treat your LiveFlow pricing model as an operational asset, not a one off spreadsheet. First, centralize it in a shared Google Drive or OneDrive location and control edit permissions. Next, add a changelog section where you record any updates to vendor pricing, your entity structure, or usage assumptions. Set a recurring calendar reminder, monthly or quarterly, to review LiveFlow pricing pages and adjust your Inputs tab. If you use a Simular AI agent, you can delegate this review: instruct the agent to open the pricing pages, scan for changes, update the sheet, and leave a note with what changed. In Excel or Sheets, add a last updated timestamp, either manually or via a simple script, so stakeholders know how fresh the numbers are. By adding light process and, ideally, an AI computer agent, your model stays reliable for decisions.
An AI computer agent like one running on Simular Pro can handle the repetitive digital work around LiveFlow pricing while you focus on negotiation and strategy. Instead of manually browsing pricing and vendor review sites, copying numbers, and rewriting formulas, you describe the workflow once: open these URLs, extract all plan details, update specified cells in my Google Sheets and Excel models, then generate a short summary of cost deltas. The agent executes this like a human, click by click, but with production grade reliability and logs you can inspect. You can then schedule it to run before budget reviews or renewal cycles, ensuring your numbers are always based on the latest pricing. The result is fewer late night spreadsheet sessions for founders, CFOs, and agency owners, and more time spent deciding what to buy, not how to calculate it.