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HP revamps print strategy

Louella Fernandes, Associate Director, Print Services and Solutions

Quocirca Viewpoint
HP held its Fall printing event in Barcelona last week where it announced the largest upgrade to its commercial printer line in almost a decade. HPs print division (previously called IPG) is now merged with its PC group to create a new Printing and Personal Systems Group (PPSG). Printing remains a somewhat bright spot in the struggling company, generating close to a fifth of its total revenue and around two thirds of HPs annual profit. However, for the full fiscal year 2012, HPs printing revenue of $24,487 million was down 6% from the previous year. The market for printing is undoubtedly shrinking and characterised by intense competition and falling margins. This is compounded by growing user mobility, with the proliferation of mobile devices such as tablets, set to accelerate a decline in the printed page, in favour of the electronic page. Consequently many vendors are turning to services to minimise the damage, offering a wider document workflow portfolio that supports the general move from paper to digital business processes. HPs expanded portfolio of hardware and software certainly help address this new print environment. HPs new range of HP Officejet Pro and HP LaserJet printers and multifunction printers (MFPs) provide new workflow and content management capabilities with some of the new inkjet models featuring a new print head designed to achieve higher printing speeds. Expanded business inkjet portfolio Since 2005, HP has sold 10 million inkjet products, with a CAGR of 30%. HP is now expanding its office portfolio with the launch of its Officejet Pro X series. Set to rival laser printers, this new class of devices feature HP PageWide Technology, based on HP Scalable Printing Technology, using new pigmented inks and a print head unit that extends the width of a page. With more than 40 thousand tiny nozzles on a stationary print head that spans the width of a page, PageWide technology delivers four colours of HP pigment ink onto a moving sheet of paper. According to HP, as the paper moves and the print head does not, its new HP Officejet Pro X Series printers are quiet and offer laser-fast print speeds and a rapid first page out. HP is targeting the new HP Officejet X Pro series at unmanaged small businesses with 5-49 employees as well as managed small and medium-sized businesses (SMB). HP claims that its Officejet Pro X Series inkjet desktop printers and multifunction printers (MFPs) deliver up to twice the speed at half the printing cost compared with color laser printers in the same class. According to HP, their PageWide Technology offers users the performance traditionally associated with lasers while outperforming low- and mid-range colour laser printers in cost, speed, and energy efficiency. Although HPs PageWide technology could certainly appeal to SMBs, this sector has traditionally been dominated by laser-based technology as customers are often reluctant to consider inkjet printing technology due to concerns related to ink costs, device speed, and paper handling capabilities. With a monthly duty cycle of 75,000 pages, the X-series would need to evolve to offer more enterprise-focused features, advanced finishing options and higher monthly duty cycle before it can compete with the Laserjet range. So given a vast range of laser based printers and MFPs, why is HP now focusing on extending its business inkjet offerings? Certainly the margins are higher for inkjet products, particularly as HP owns the

HP revamps print strategy

http://www.quocirca.com

2012 Quocirca Ltd

intellectual property and development of its inkjet technology, whereas it sources toner and LaserJet technology from Canon. However, HP is not the only vendor with page-wide inkjet products it also faces competition from Memjet who are licensing their technology to other OEMs. Xerox also offers solid ink printers and MFPs targeted at the same market sector. The workflow optimised MFP handling big data Although HP is dominant in the single function laser printer market, it has a much lower share of the MFP market, overshadowed by Xerox, Canon and Ricoh. HPs new workflow optimised MFPs aim to change this, increasing collaboration and productivity by easily capturing, indexing, storing, searching and retrieving documents. Devices feature advanced document processing, a range of security management features, two sided scanning and a pull-out keyboard for fast and accurate data entry. These devices are designed to meet the needs of the Big-data challenge for many businesses as much of this data still resides on paper. The HP workflow MFPs can be integrated with HPs new Flow CM Professional content management capability based on software from its 2011 Autonomy acquisition, which can run either on-premise or in the cloud. HP Flow CM Professional enables enterprises to access information in paper/electronic documents, audio, video, email, and web pages. HPs MFP portfolio has long been due an overhaul, and HP is recognising that with print volumes on the decline, MFPs need to be more fully utilised as tools for document capture, routing and archival. Nevertheless, HP is not first to market with these capabilities. Some competitors are already actively offering document workflow integrated MFPs for instance Lexmark has recently announced a range of MFPs that integrate with its Perceptive ECM software portfolio. HPs workflow MFPs certainly offer a comprehensive and sophisticated set of capabilities. For now it remains to be seen what, if any impact, the saga currently raging at HP with regard to the Autonomy acquisition will have on this product portfolio. Conclusion HP has had a turbulent 2012, and is operating in a market with mixed fortunes. HP still has some work to do to increase the penetration of business inkjets and helping businesses overcome the negative perceptions that they have about inkjet technology in the office. In the enterprise, MFPs are becoming more widespread and HPs competitors are already working with existing customers to leverage their existing MFP investments and deploy document workflow. HP clearly intends to hold its ground and revive its once lucrative jewel in the crown. The competitive landscape is only set to intensify, but HPs IT reputation, breadth and depth of products and vast distribution network will be key to it driving innovation in its product portfolio that accommodates the new trends of big data, cloud and mobility.

HP revamps print strategy

http://www.quocirca.com

2012 Quocirca Ltd

About Quocirca
Quocirca is a primary research and analysis company specialising in the business impact of information technology and communications (ITC). With world-wide, native language reach, Quocirca provides in-depth insights into the views of buyers and influencers in large, mid-sized and small organisations. Its analyst team is made up of realworld practitioners with first-hand experience of ITC delivery who continuously research and track the industry and its real usage in the markets. Through researching perceptions, Quocirca uncovers the real hurdles to technology adoption the personal and political aspects of an organisations environment and the pressures of the need for demonstrable business value in any implementation. This capability to uncover and report back on the end-user perceptions in the market enables Quocirca to advise on the realities of technology adoption, not the promises. Quocirca research is always pragmatic, business orientated and conducted in the context of the bigger picture. ITC has the ability to transform businesses and the processes that drive them, but often fails to do so. Quocircas mission is to help organisations improve their success rate in process enablement through better levels of understanding and the adoption of the correct technologies at the correct time. Quocirca has a pro-active primary research programme, regularly surveying users, purchasers and resellers of ITC products and services on emerging, evolving and maturing technologies. Over time, Quocirca has built a picture of long term investment trends, providing invaluable information for the whole of the ITC community. Quocirca works with global and local providers of ITC products and services to help them deliver on the promise that ITC holds for business. Quocircas clients include Oracle, Microsoft, IBM, O2, T-Mobile, HP, Xerox, EMC, Symantec and Cisco, along with other large and medium sized vendors, service providers and more specialist firms.

Full access to all of Quocircas public output (reports, articles, presentations, blogs and videos) can be made at http://www.quocirca.com

HP revamps print strategy

http://www.quocirca.com

2012 Quocirca Ltd

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