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Posts Tagged ‘saving money on copiers’

Ways to Decrease Your Spending on a New Copier in Denver

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008
WorkCentre 73XX

WorkCentre 73XX

Here are some thoughts on some simple ways to reduce the amount you spend on copiers.  This is true for either color or black and white devices.

1) Look at all associated costs.  Not just cost per print or just equipment costs.  Figure all costs except for paper and compare.

2) Look at maintenance records on machines.  Does one fail 4 times more often?  What’s it cost your company to have a copier not working?

3) Don’t get color unless you need color.  If you do and you don’t really need it, it will be used on everything.  It never seems to be as little as you will expect it should.

4) Don’t buy tabloid capable copiers if letter/legal will suffice

5) Let your rep know if you work for a large company as there are often “major account” pricing distinctions.

This is a good starting point.  Please give us a call if you are in the copier market.

Dirty Little Secret #1 — Make the Base Prints too High

Friday, October 10th, 2008
Kyocera / Copystar 5050 Copier

Kyocera / Copystar 5050 Copier

We deal with customers constantly who have a great copier, have great service and think they are getting great pricing, but there is a dirty little secret in the copier world which helps the vendor make money and costs you money.  Basically it is signing you up for more pages than you need.  Here are some of the ways it will be worded…

“You want to make sure you have enough copies on your plan so the prices don’t change every month.”

“If you can sign up for more copies (more than you use), we can get you a better rate”

There are other ways this could be worded, but you get the idea.  So, let’s say your Denver branch has a copier which averages 12,000 prints per month and it’s pretty consistent.  You copier guy might reccommend a 15,000 page per month plan so “you don’t go over.”  Doesn’t sound terrible, but if you still only do your 12,000 per month…  you are getting billed for 3,000 prints you aren’t using.  If you are getting charged the industry average of $.012 per print, this will cost you $432 per year for nothing. 

My “rule of thumb” is to sign up for 80% of your monthly average unless your average is REALLY stable or your volume is sure to increase.