We saw in the former article that volumes could very well fall by 15% over the next two years. And this is a “nice” scenario as we have seen that one of the two “reasons” for printing is the need to keep a paper copy in the organisation, which will be quickly reduced by the adoption of Content Management and Electronic Archiving.
Now a client in his right mind (and the data is now visible thanks to automated reporting) will certainly ask for a major rearrangement of his fleet and do the following
The first two mean a further reduction of net new sales.
On the third point, Vendors may decide to enforce strictly the 5-year contracts to maintain short-term revenue levels but the backlash will come at renewal time. We are fully aware that it is very difficult to downsize a fleet at such a fast rate, as leases are in place and assets need to be amortised.
We can have an infinite discussion on the calculation and on the original analyst data and come to agree that maybe the “correct” figure is 10%, or maybe 20%.
If Revenues from print (HW and supplies) are really down by 10,15 or maybe 20% in 2015 (now only 18 months away), have you got a strategy to replace these revenues quickly enough?
Shall we see after all these years this consolidation happen? At the Vendor level? At the Channel level?
Our advice to Channel partners is that you transform at a much faster rate than you have been.
Our advice to Vendors is that you make sure you are betting on the right channel partners.
This article was written on 01 Oct 2014, and is filled under Business Forecast, Managed Print Systems.
More fo the same from Markess (French data company) explaining ho process virtualization is gaining ground
http://www.itforbusiness.fr/component/k2/item/5622-la-dematerialisation-est-en-pleine-croissance
[…] is right in his analysis, saying that print volumes are on the decline. We even believe this trend is going to accelerate next year and the following. However the profitability of the sector remains […]
Interesting feedback from Cloud Summit in NYC
Scott Henry is EVP and CTO of the Madison Square Garden, the famous sports events company. he is new in the job and has been struck by the incredible discrepancy between front office applications, to inform spectators, that rely on very modern technologies and the archaic stage of the Back office applications used in the HQ. he mentioned a travel back in time of some 30 years in a world where paper exchanges and communications are predominant.
If they change that, it just confirms our message. Volumes will sink.
Here are the links http://cloudbusinesssummit.com and courtesy of Louis Nauges http://nauges.typepad.com/my_weblog/2014/12/dsi-états-unis-et-europe-mêmes-challenges-cloud-business-summit-new-york.html