Do you, or does your organization have a strategy for desktop printers? If you are like most of the managers I speak to the answer is no. When they do it is typically that desktop printers are not allowed at all or the exact opposite; anything goes! I am not sure either of these are real strategies.
My experiences have revealed very few fleet management providers address the entire desktop fleet and usually ignore the impact of their expense in assessments. If you notice I specifically said fleet management because I believe a broader managed print services engagement includes all of the devices by default.
I think desktop printers are often ignored for the following reasons:
- Their impact on costs is underestimated
- They add to the complexity of the project
- No one wants to address the associated political issues
Impact on Your Document Output Environment
If you believe your desktop printers will not have a significant impact on your expenses you may want to think again. If I look back over some recent clients' environments it is not at all unusual for the inkjet devices alone to look something like this:
- Inkjet devices ranged from 3 to 33% of the overall device population
- Inkjet produced pages ranged from 2 to 11% of the total pages
- Inkjet driven expenses ranged from 6 to 43% of the total expense
- Savings from an effective inkjet strategy ranged from 8 to 65% of the total savings
The actual averages would be in the upper half of these ranges, there were a couple of environments included where a first pass at removing desktop printers had already been completed. The message within the data is that most clients are quite surprised by the actual impact of their desktop, and specifically inkjet devices.
Complexity
Adding locally connected desktop printers to a well designed MPS project does not increase the work and complexity beyond the potential benefits. It is understandable why a fleet management provider who is not likely to increase their revenues as a result of this effort would not want to include them. However, you as the client or end-user should be concerned with a component of your document output environment with as much potential impact as the desktop devices may actually have. The actual savings from a good desktop strategy for some of the clients included in the numbers above ran into thousands of dollars per month.
Political Issues
When you conduct a physical survey inside an enterprise you hear every reason why someone needs (deserves) a personal desktop printer. I have had the pleasure of $450 per hour professionals sit me down and present their 30 minute justification.
Security is an issue that no one believes can, or will be challenged but it can be:
- Network printers and multifunction devices have very good secure print functions
- How secure is printing a document on a slow desktop printer to leave it sit in the output tray or on the desktop?
- Security is in the workflow and not the device
Having a personal printer saves time and therefore expense (soft costs):
- What was the cost difference between printing the job on the desktop versus the workgroup device?
- How much time was saved and what was the value of the time?
- Was printing the job on the desktop device a good investment?
- Are you really that busy 8 hours per day?
Printing to a workgroup device disrupts my workflow:
- An interesting statistic inside of my data is that a high percentage of users print less than one job per day to a local device?
Printing photographs requires a desktop color printer:
- If the photographic printing is that important you should be using color management and printing on a photo grade paper
- The above is rarely evidenced by the pages I see sitting on the printer and desktop
Let me make it clear that I am not one who believes that every desktop printer should be "yanked" out of an organization but am convinced that there should be a strategy for their deployment within a well managed document output environment. This discussion can provide an outline for such a strategy but obviously will need greater detail based on your unique environment, cost structure and corporate (institution) philosophy.
I work for the government and they just took away all of our desktop printers. It has affected my performance and productivity of my job. Now I have to fill out a waiver. I'm not sure if I should file a Job Description Waiver or a Reasonable Accomodation Waiver. I do a high level of printing in my job and don't want to have to keep getting up every time I print.
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