Skip to main content

Tagged With "IMAGING"

Comment

Re: In Search of the Office Imaging Industry’s Top Sales People

Wallingford ·
I just do not understand why this is necessary. Unless of course you and Art are on some sort of a reward, working for or with the US Inland Revenue people ? We all know who we are, that are any good at selling !!! I do not see any real benefit other than those with Narcissistic tendencies.
Comment

Re: In Search of the Office Imaging Industry’s Top Sales People

Art Post ·
At least with this award not everyone will get a trophy~
Comment

Re: In Search of the Office Imaging Industry’s Top Sales People

Larry Levine ·
What about the direct side Art?
Comment

Re: In Search of the Office Imaging Industry’s Top Sales People

Art Post ·
Larry: Both Direct and Dealers are good!
Comment

Re: Can a Digital Copier Scan to Dropbox?

GrantW ·
Great Post Art. Xerox have a DropBox app available for their new ConnectKey devices but the user has to buy a scanpack which cover X number of scans and has a 12 month shelf-life. The advantages of having it on the MFD as an App is that any user (e.g. at a college) can log in to their DropBox account and print or scan to / from their own account securely. We've been doing the same as you and circumventing the charge or need for an app by pointing the scan to a DropBox folder on a desktop.
Comment

Re: 8 Talking Points for Selecting an Imaging/Copier Vendor

kathie ·
Hey Art, can I use this? You offer some terrific points that I would like to get out to my network. I would be happy, of course, to source you and your blog/website as the author. I would post to my company FB page and to my LinkedIn page as well. kathie
Comment

Re: 8 Talking Points for Selecting an Imaging/Copier Vendor

Art Post ·
No problem, please feel free and credits would be awesome! Just double check my grammar.
Comment

Re: 8 Talking Points for Selecting an Imaging/Copier Vendor

John Saramak ·
Art Some very good points here, for both a buyer and seller. So often a seller is focused on one aspect of the deal with others being and economic time bomb. I think offering the professional "bowing out" of a price deal is necessary to consider, as just when you think prices couldn't get lower, they do. Taking an approach towards a true, mutually beneficial deal will either get appreciated, or get your on your way towards finding one.
Comment

Re: 8 Talking Points for Selecting an Imaging/Copier Vendor

SalesServiceGuy ·
I am helping a dealer set up a new webpage. I have read that helpful tips like the above help Search Engine Optimization (SEO) drive more traffic to your website. I will attach the same and use P4P as a reference.
Comment

Re: 8 Talking Points for Selecting an Imaging/Copier Vendor

Czech ·
Art, ballsy on declining to propose. Love it!
Comment

Re: 8 Talking Points for Selecting an Imaging/Copier Vendor

kathie ·
There were few misspelling but I’m trying to become more forgiving. : )
Comment

Re: Will H.P. Uber the Imaging Channel

Martin Hofman ·
After a week og being overwhelmed with opinions this is the most sensible/viosionary article I read about HP - Samsung
Comment

Re: Will H.P. Uber the Imaging Channel

Ray Stasiezcko ·
Thanks Martin Hofman, The industry needs more "Imaginationalyst" (Yes I made that word up). Without the ability to imagine a completely different way of doing things, or the ability to break loose from stubbornness. Change will always happen to you instead of being caused by you. Too much analysis not enough Imagination we need to combine them "Imaginationalyst"
Comment

Re: Will H.P. Uber the Imaging Channel

Czech ·
This is a great article! One point that I disagree on is that HP will be entering the SMB market with this acquisition. What's the point? Dealers own the SMB market, and most dealers will sell whatever their customers already have. Where HP has the advantage is going into their national and global accounts where they dominate with MPS contracts on A4 devices. Finally, they can go back to the banks/governments/etc and kick out the Canon/Ricoh/Xerox A3 devices that are in there. And because HP...
Comment

Re: A Growth Strategy or an Exit Strategy both take an EBIT Strategy

Jf ·
As you've said for years, the Imaging market is at crossroads. - Acquire other dealerships and achieve economies of scale? - Position the dealership on other markets? The only bad solution would be to deny the reality. Therefore, the accountancy is always right. And your EBIT definition makes sense.
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, Let's Become the Innovation Channel!!

Jf ·
Geo-strategic picture. Just great, Ray!
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, Let's Become the Innovation Channel!!

Art Post ·
Ray Good stuff, however when discussing imaging (which is a wide portfolio of devices), everyone seems to forget about the huge growth of niche imaging devices. Those devices include wide format, grand wide format, label presses, and envelope presses. While in Las Vegas in the spring of this year, I was able to attend the ISA Sign Expo. I've been to a lot of events in the past year and the ISA was the largest event I every attended. Two hundred thousand square feet of convention space with...
Comment

Re: How Far Out On the Pier Are We?

Ray Stasiezcko ·
Thanks Art
Comment

Re: How Far Out On the Pier Are We?

Art Post ·
Ray Stasieczko Great point with the typewriter industry. Many of those typewriter dealers saw the writing on the wall and moved into the imaging industry. They survived, they flourished and they made the change to another product within the Office Technology Industry. There are too many brilliant dealers principals out there that will let themselves fail by staying on board a sinking ship. Those dealers will innovate because they have too in order to survive. Those that are not brilliant...
Comment

Re: When your Deliverable doesn’t excite your Customers’ then it’s time to Innovate or even change that Deliverable.

Art Post ·
Special thanx to Ray for letting us post this blog today Water, what's wrong with water? There is still growth in print, just not in the SMB or Enterprise markets. I'm in the trenches every day and you're correct. There's no more excitement with mfps. They all do the same thing, they are all reliable and when push comes to shove, all we are doing is stealing clients from each other. Growth for companies like Ricoh, Konic a Minolta, Canon and Kyo could be robotics. Robotics could mirror the...
Comment

Re: When your Deliverable doesn’t excite your Customers’ then it’s time to Innovate or even change that Deliverable.

Art Post ·
https://www.linkedin.com/in/raystasieczko/ good guy, been posting his stuff for quite sometime
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, It’s also about a Lease-less Future!

Larry Kirsch ·
Interesting. Have been working on new revenue ideas for the copier dealer channel.
Comment

Re: Top Ten Copier & Imaging Industry Predictions for 2018

Martin Hofman ·
11a. For 2018 the total A4/A3 print volume (compared to 2017) will reduce with 10% 11b. For the coming 10 years the total A4/A3 print volume will reduce with 10% per year and will (in 2027) only be 35% of the current volume
Comment

Re: MY Top Ten Copy Machines of All Time

Larry Kirsch ·
Good story. Minolta does it for many...
Comment

Re: MY Top Ten Copy Machines of All Time

jbh46 ·
Gotta go back a REALLY long time in the industry, so many won't even know this: the Kodak 100 & 150. Really reliable machines that heavily created industry disruption with Xerox having dominant market share and IBM climbing fast in the mid-70's and then a new player, Kodak, opened the door for many other later players to enter.
Comment

Re: MY Top Ten Copy Machines of All Time

livestrong ·
First machine I knocked out was an “Olivetti Copia II” at a law firm at 120 Wall St in 1975 with a XRX 3100. I actually wrote the proposal vs an IBM “ Copier II” since I never saw the machine and the managing partner said the machine name with such a heavy Brooklyn accent I had never heard of the Olivetti “ Copia” 2 version. Never saw another one after that. Rental only available before xerox came up with XEEP .....
Comment

Re: MY Top Ten Copy Machines of All Time

John Mooney ·
When I had my interview at AOE on Madison Ave I was totally perplexed at why the sales manager was so in love with the brand new Ricoh FT6645 and even said to him "It's just a copier". The following month this 22 year old made $6K on a Ricoh FT6645 and I never said: "it's just a copier" again.
Comment

Re: When Does Your IT Provider Start to Care About Your Cost Per Page?

Michael ·
Thank you!!! From Michael Alfheim....
Comment

Re: When Does Your IT Provider Start to Care About Your Cost Per Page?

Rick Backus ·
Well Art you would think they would since it would mean more professional services for them. I think some companies are so entrenched in their core competencies that they tend to ignore anything outside that realm. Just my two cents for what it's worth.
Comment

Re: When Does Your IT Provider Start to Care About Your Cost Per Page?

Doug ·
Suggestion - electronic forms and store - workflow setup to email patient their copy (no paper) - print copy for patient if needed. Doug Gruver - Business Analyst Stratix Systems Cell 215-622-7270
Comment

Re: When Does Your IT Provider Start to Care About Your Cost Per Page?

Art Post ·
Rick & Doug Appreciate the comments!
Comment

Re: When Does Your IT Provider Start to Care About Your Cost Per Page?

TimB ·
First of all, from my experience, doctors seem to be notoriously cheap when it comes to office equipment. The thought of giving their staff decent office equipment is not on their radar. They'd rather invest in the latest medical equipment or gadget, Mercedes/BMW, or hobby. That being said, re: HP printers, depending on the model, some of those older printers (like any in the 4000's) print pretty darn cheaply. Divide, say, $125 or $150 by 20,000 and that's pretty darn cheap. They have a hard...
Comment

Re: Selling Copiers "Opportunties Abound to Make a Few Extra Bucks"

Old Glory ·
Let me play devil's advocate here...First of all, usually it's not the dealers that forbid selling in other territories, it's the manufacturers, and dealers are bound by contract to uphold that obligation, which by the way is the only thing keeping us from having to compete with the internet. Secondly, if you receive any kind of salary and spend daytime hours selling a different product, that would be grounds for dismissal, regardless of brand or territory. If you question whether that is...
Comment

Re: Selling Copiers "Opportunties Abound to Make a Few Extra Bucks"

Art Post ·
Old Glory: Great comment, off hours would be the key. If you are salaried then you need to stick to working those hours for the company you work for, period! However, if you are a commissioned only rep, or looking to get out on your own, the opportunity stated above is a good way to get a start.
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel Dealers it’s your decision

Art Post ·
I call it the "War for A4"
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel Dealers it’s your decision

Martin Hofman ·
So true Ray!
Comment

Re: How To Sell Copiers In The Age of Coronavirus

SalesServiceGuy ·
That was a great 45 minutes! Gave me a few ideas. I plan to watch again as there was a lot of content to take in plus forward to my sales teams. Really appreciate the recording. Two very informative videos from the CEOs of Konica Minolta and Xerox on what they are doing and what is happening with their companies during the Corona Virus pandemic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GbwTyfpX8s Konica Minolta has health care robots to measure patients temperatures walking into hospitals and to help...
Comment

Re: How To Sell Copiers In The Age of Coronavirus

Frank Vasquez ·
Art - great session yesterday. I recorded it, but I only have 52 minutes of it. Let me know if you want me to send it to you.
Comment

Re: How To Sell Copiers In The Age of Coronavirus

Art Post ·
Frank, please do send it to me apost@p4photel.com @Frank Vasquez
Comment

Re: How To Sell Copiers In The Age of Coronavirus

Art Post ·
WOW! That's crazy with the helicopter and the copier
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, 2019 the year of DaaS - My suggestions to help you Implement.

Art Post ·
Wes also stated that early adopters will see greater profits with flat rate billing. Laggards will get in last and see the least amount of profit. Your statement about flat rate billing on RFPs will be more frequent in 2019. I receive many copier RF's Ill have to read them more closely to see if the flat rate is in the t's & c's
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, 2019 the year of DaaS - My suggestions to help you Implement.

Anders And ·
Will somebody please explain to me how you can offer unlimited prints at a fixed price, when your cost varies with the actual volume of prints? The only way flat rate is possible is the fact that print is declining, and you use that as a smoke screen. Flat rate is, as I understand it, like leasing or selling a car to a customer with free limitless gas and miles at a fixed monthly price. Obviosly you have to have escape doors in your t&c's - my customers will find out right away. When we...
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, 2019 the year of DaaS - My suggestions to help you Implement.

Art Post ·
I was hoping some one could chime on this. Let me see if I can get Ray's attention on this
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, 2019 the year of DaaS - My suggestions to help you Implement.

Ray Stasiezcko ·
Anders good questions. Flat Rate billing is simply a billing method. The most vital component is understanding cost. Our industry has known customer volumes for decades. We also know it’s declining. Customers’ will not change printing behaviors based on billing. Obviously, each dealer will determine their T&C. The smart ones will focus on controlling cost of labor and increase their FCE, they will sell the right equipment in the right volume band, and they will understand the importance...
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, 2019 the year of DaaS - My suggestions to help you Implement.

Scotty ·
I believe it's location, location,location. What is usually hot in the city is not always taken up as practice in rural areas. With the help of units being able to email meter reads it removes the "annoying" part of collection meter reads. I am with the first guy as I am a long timer(35 years) and agree with his assessment
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, 2019 the year of DaaS - My suggestions to help you Implement.

Ray Stasiezcko ·
Well, I am old timer too my friend. However, I learned along time ago geography does not stop progress. The new competitor who comes to the rural landscape won't deliver by the rules of the old way. I would image back when C.P.C took the place of the previous contract type. Many in the rural areas thought well, that will never happen out here. Well it did.
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, 2019 the year of DaaS - My suggestions to help you Implement.

Anders And ·
Thanks for commenting I am not worried about labor, I am more worried about consumables and yield parts. Our mif (mostly SMB) is producing less b/w and more color. And we have many customers who has outsourced large print jobs - fx. real estate agents who prints flyers. I am sure that they would bring that back home if the only cost is time and paper. So, some may change their behavior. Collecting counters is not a big deal any more - we are a Ricoh reseller (since 1980!) - and most of the...
Comment

Re: Imaging Channel, 2019 the year of DaaS - My suggestions to help you Implement.

wesmcartor ·
The difference in our iDaaS model is that volume DOES impact cost. Other flat rate model offer a rate with no impact on volume. Our program uses the current customer volume, service efficiency, margin expectations as well as our data on over 4 million devices to help remove the variables and concerns over switching to a no meter billing model. We can also adjust for color ratio's. So with the possible exception of print for pay, production and maybe some schools there is no reason not to...
Comment

Re: The Predictors of the Future of MPS Seem Void Imagination

Larry Kirsch ·
Time will tell. Interesting Thanks for your views Enjoy
 
×
×
×
×
×