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Monday, December 9, 2013
Time to Put the Cost Per Copy Model Down.
Oh yeah, we're going there.
It started long ago. In the beginning, making copies of business documents - memo's, invoices, reports - was slow and tedious.
So we built devices to perform these duties.
Thousands of moving parts, heat, static electricity and heavy handed employees contributed to a dynamic and precarious environment - they required a good amount of attention.
To put it bluntly, our machines broke down so often we needed a way to pay for technicians.
To support the machines in field the 'industry' hatched a plan:
"Why don't we sell service with the machines? We'll make it impossible for anyone else to supply our devices, so we'll combine service and supplies into a billable line item, determined by how many pages come out of our devices...and will call these 'clicks' after the noise a meter makes with every copy and call the billing model Cost Per Copy..."
Genius, really.
Oh sure, there were other schemes - blending ...
Read the rest, here.
Monday, November 4, 2013
The paperless office will come to being over a copier rep's dead body...so to speak.
Yes, I believe the long standing transactional business model of the copier industry will have to die before the paperless office ever stands a chance. Indeed, the majority of the die-hards in the industry are motivated, trained and developed to increase paper in the office, not decrease it.
You see on the vendor supply side, there are different types of providers. For the purpose of this blog, let's focus on the die-hards, the traditional copier companies that dig in their heels, resist change and insist that the old school way is the best way. Or at times...the only way.
It is no secret that thousands of owners, managers and copier/mfp reps thrive on six and seven figure incomes all derived from selling office machines to produce as much toner/ink on paper as possible. The die-hard copier teams have goals to sell copiers/printers/mfp's to businesses "without regard". That is without regard except for the numbers. The higher the number the better the number whether its in units, price or pages. Hear that cow bell ring...seriously.
Read the rest, here...really good stuff!
Yes, I believe the long standing transactional business model of the copier industry will have to die before the paperless office ever stands a chance. Indeed, the majority of the die-hards in the industry are motivated, trained and developed to increase paper in the office, not decrease it.
You see on the vendor supply side, there are different types of providers. For the purpose of this blog, let's focus on the die-hards, the traditional copier companies that dig in their heels, resist change and insist that the old school way is the best way. Or at times...the only way.
It is no secret that thousands of owners, managers and copier/mfp reps thrive on six and seven figure incomes all derived from selling office machines to produce as much toner/ink on paper as possible. The die-hard copier teams have goals to sell copiers/printers/mfp's to businesses "without regard". That is without regard except for the numbers. The higher the number the better the number whether its in units, price or pages. Hear that cow bell ring...seriously.
Read the rest, here...really good stuff!
Thursday, October 24, 2013
013: Managed print Services And The Last Generation Gap
The Last Generation Gap- from 2013...
If you remember back to the '60s - riots, Viet Nam, Presidential and political assassinations, hippies at Woodstock, the Beatles, Stones, the Peace Movement, and a vaguely remembered issue called the "The Generation Gap".
This Gap referred to the difference between younger generations and their elders. Back then, teenagers regarded their parents' established social norms as outdated and restrictive - many rebelled:
- They burned draft cards.
- They marched in the street.
- They took up new social and political issues.
- They expressed themselves through free sex, lots of drugs, and rock and roll.
- They didn't trust anyone over 40.
- And they promised to never, ever end up like their parents.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
013: "MpS in a Box", "Managed Services in a Box" and other Silly Things Marketing Comes up With
We can call this out, because we've been part of the movement.
I saw another services-in-a-box marketing statement the other day. They were advertising a webinar about something or other - managed services in a box.
It struck me, weren't we just complaining about the commoditization of MpS? Wasn't it a couple of years ago, when we started to see "MPS in a Box" offerings? And once we put ourselves in a box, are we not off to see our maker or worse, a commodity?
Why do we do this ?
Like you, we've been spoon fed the "...in a box..." value proposition time and time again.
From the word "solution" to the phrase "Professional Services", unique approaches to unique problems do not easily translate into predictable ROI. So they box, barcode and ship creating commission gates forcing us to attach the latest software sku to our boxes in order to collect the pittance.
Think I'm wrong? How many faxservers, DocSends or ECopy did you sell? Without a copier?
Here's the deal - we in the field do not place our expertise in a box. We are unique as individuals and when we discuss opportunities with clients, our uniqueness shines through.
The only people who want to place expertise and acumen in a box are those who manufacture the box. What are they making in those plants, anyway?
- Are they assembling business solutions? No.
- Are they putting together answers to complex business problems? Not really.
- Are the container ships unloading Workflow or Process Optimization? Nope.
- How about Business Acumen? Oh heck no.
What leaves their shores and hits our docks is a box - glass, plastic and tin - that's all. As long as the factories kick out machines, machine based quotas will continue down stream into the trenches - from the manufacturer, to the branch/dealer, to the sales manager, down to you my good friend. Scrub your MIF, churn n burn, and call it ALL managed services in a box.
Remember when "think outside of the box" was the mantra of the day? What fools we were back then, buying into the whole think differently mind set which was only true as long as our different thinking on the 1st of the month brought in more boxes by the 28th. Fact is, back then, we could of attached George Forman grills to our copiers and people would have signed 68 month leases anyway.
It just didn't matter.
"On the first of the month we sell solutions, after the 15th, we sell boxes..."- Ikon, 2005ish.
Remember when "think outside of the box" was the mantra of the day? What fools we were back then, buying into the whole think differently mind set which was only true as long as our different thinking on the 1st of the month brought in more boxes by the 28th. Fact is, back then, we could of attached George Forman grills to our copiers and people would have signed 68 month leases anyway.
It just didn't matter.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
The other day, Jennifer and I had the privilege of visiting one of the premier software companies in the world headquartered locally. The campus was impressive and facilities as opulent as the Wynn.
We were there as guests invited to check out something called Visual Analytics: a long way from the Ricoh Demo-Rama at IKON.
The rest of the story...
We were there as guests invited to check out something called Visual Analytics: a long way from the Ricoh Demo-Rama at IKON.
The rest of the story...
CompTIA Unveils New Name for IT Channel’s Premier Event: Welcome to CompTIA ChannelCon
Conference will build on Breakaway legacy with more education, training and networking opportunities
Downers Grove, Ill., March 6, 2013 – CompTIA, the non-profit association for the information technology (IT) industry, today unveiled CompTIA ChannelCon as the new name and identity for its premier annual event.
The inaugural CompTIA ChannelCon is scheduled for July 29-31 at the Peabody Orlando Hotel in Orlando, Fla.
“Our premier event, known for many years as Breakaway, now has a name that truly reflects its scope,” said Kelly Ricker, senior vice president, events and education, CompTIA. “The quality of the meetings, partnership opportunities, hot topic sessions and channel-neutral training make ChannelCon an unparalleled experience in the IT industry.”
The format and content of CompTIA’s Breakaway conference has changed significantly over the last several years, shifting from an event that emphasized lead generation to a conference centered on business education and networking opportunities.
In 2010, CompTIA shifted Breakaway from a hosted industry event to an un-hosted model, where attendees chose to make their own investments to participate. The following year, a vendor-neutral channel training and education platform was added to the conference.
The introduction of CompTIA’s member communities also raised the activity and engagement levels at the event, allowing vendors, distributors and solution providers to sit at the same table to discuss best practices, address issues facing their businesses and develop initiatives to grow the IT industry.
“We embrace our role as the gathering place where industry opportunities and challenges are addressed collaboratively by all channel professionals, regardless of company or category,” Ricker said. “CompTIA ChannelCon brings together the best cross section of the industry: solution providers, vendors, distributors, analysts, media, tech associations and other channel organizations.”
ChannelCon attendees can expect great education and training opportunities, a lively vendor fair and the unparalleled access to key channel executives.
Other planned activities include:
• Workshops on CompTIA trustmarks, the business-level credentials for IT businesses that adheres to the industry's best practices.
• CompTIA Executive Certificate programs, which provide busy IT professionals the opportunity to expand their knowledge and skill sets in areas such as cloud computing and mobile technologies.
• E-learning Capstone Sessions, the final piece to completing an e-learning Executive Certificate.
• Keynotes speeches and panel discussions featuring top leaders in the business and IT arenas.
• The “Unconference Lunch”, an opportunity for attendees to drive the conference agenda.
• Private events for exhibitors.
• Best of CompTIA ChannelCon Awards.
Registration for CompTIA ChannelCon will open in mid-March. Visit CompTIA Events for the latest information and updates.
About CompTIA
CompTIA is the voice of the world’s information technology (IT) industry. Its members are the companies at the forefront of innovation; and the professionals responsible for maximizing the benefits organizations receive from their investments in technology. CompTIA is dedicated to advancing industry growth through its educational programs, market research, networking events, professional certifications, and public policy advocacy. For more information, visit www.comptia.org, http://www.facebook.com/CompTIA and http://twitter.com/comptia.
Contact:
Steven Ostrowski
Director, Corporate Communications
CompTIA
630-678-8468
smostrowski@comptia.org
Downers Grove, Ill., March 6, 2013 – CompTIA, the non-profit association for the information technology (IT) industry, today unveiled CompTIA ChannelCon as the new name and identity for its premier annual event.
The inaugural CompTIA ChannelCon is scheduled for July 29-31 at the Peabody Orlando Hotel in Orlando, Fla.
“Our premier event, known for many years as Breakaway, now has a name that truly reflects its scope,” said Kelly Ricker, senior vice president, events and education, CompTIA. “The quality of the meetings, partnership opportunities, hot topic sessions and channel-neutral training make ChannelCon an unparalleled experience in the IT industry.”
The format and content of CompTIA’s Breakaway conference has changed significantly over the last several years, shifting from an event that emphasized lead generation to a conference centered on business education and networking opportunities.
In 2010, CompTIA shifted Breakaway from a hosted industry event to an un-hosted model, where attendees chose to make their own investments to participate. The following year, a vendor-neutral channel training and education platform was added to the conference.
The introduction of CompTIA’s member communities also raised the activity and engagement levels at the event, allowing vendors, distributors and solution providers to sit at the same table to discuss best practices, address issues facing their businesses and develop initiatives to grow the IT industry.
“We embrace our role as the gathering place where industry opportunities and challenges are addressed collaboratively by all channel professionals, regardless of company or category,” Ricker said. “CompTIA ChannelCon brings together the best cross section of the industry: solution providers, vendors, distributors, analysts, media, tech associations and other channel organizations.”
ChannelCon attendees can expect great education and training opportunities, a lively vendor fair and the unparalleled access to key channel executives.
Other planned activities include:
• Workshops on CompTIA trustmarks, the business-level credentials for IT businesses that adheres to the industry's best practices.
• CompTIA Executive Certificate programs, which provide busy IT professionals the opportunity to expand their knowledge and skill sets in areas such as cloud computing and mobile technologies.
• E-learning Capstone Sessions, the final piece to completing an e-learning Executive Certificate.
• Keynotes speeches and panel discussions featuring top leaders in the business and IT arenas.
• The “Unconference Lunch”, an opportunity for attendees to drive the conference agenda.
• Private events for exhibitors.
• Best of CompTIA ChannelCon Awards.
Registration for CompTIA ChannelCon will open in mid-March. Visit CompTIA Events for the latest information and updates.
About CompTIA
CompTIA is the voice of the world’s information technology (IT) industry. Its members are the companies at the forefront of innovation; and the professionals responsible for maximizing the benefits organizations receive from their investments in technology. CompTIA is dedicated to advancing industry growth through its educational programs, market research, networking events, professional certifications, and public policy advocacy. For more information, visit www.comptia.org, http://www.facebook.com/CompTIA and http://twitter.com/comptia.
Contact:
Steven Ostrowski
Director, Corporate Communications
CompTIA
630-678-8468
smostrowski@comptia.org
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Is It Workflow? Or Is It Just a Tool?
Tool: “something (as an instrument or apparatus) used in performing an operation or necessary in the practice of a vocation or profession.” – Merriam-Webster.
Back in the good ol’ days, before MpS, a few smart folks started referring to scanning as the on-ramp to document management. Not a bad way to look at it, and not a bad way to turn an ancillary tool into more than what it is – that's called marketing. It’s akin to selling copiers as “document management engines,” when all they really do is put marks on paper. It’s selling an idea, not the machine.
Today the new dimension in managed print services – workflow – is undergoing the same marketing treatment. As the rush toward this niche intensifies, intrepid voyagers be aware: There is a difference between workflow tools and workflow.
Read the rest, here.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
013: Wall Street Lets Up on HP: But Why?
From the Wall Street Journal,
"H-P’s numbers buy CEO Whitman some breathing room. Hewlett-Packard Co.‘s first-quarter earnings declined 16% as the technology giant continued to see weaker sales across all its divisions, including its core personal computer business, reports the WSJ’s Ben Worthen. Shares nevertheless soared in after-hours trading as H-P’s numbers beat Wall Street estimates..."
We listened to HP's earnings call (Feb. 21st) our 4th, and for the life of me, I can't find the 'silver-lining everyone else sees - but there is one.
HP is following the tried and true public formula for companies on the mend -
- Admit problems...
- Clean house...
- Blame economic headwinds, past leadership and bad deals of the past...
- Make the future seem as though it is going to be very bad...
- Report numbers that are "less bad" than the original thought/projected...
- Get the street off your back..
There's a concept in military science called, "shaping the battlefield". In HP's case this means setting expectations so incredibly low, feeding detractors fog and allowing media-allies, 'privileged access'.
When you hear, "...HP beats Wall Street analysts projections..." question what data these analysts utilized establishing their forecast.
For the rest of us, here are the numbers that hold relevance. The largest technology company in the world, the company that grew from humble beginnings into the corporation we all work for, the entity that rode the output wave, encouraging over printing along the way, is fighting for her life:
See the rest here.
For the rest of us, here are the numbers that hold relevance. The largest technology company in the world, the company that grew from humble beginnings into the corporation we all work for, the entity that rode the output wave, encouraging over printing along the way, is fighting for her life:
See the rest here.
Thursday, January 31, 2013
What if Nobody Buys MFD's ?
Sure, all the standard OEMs have released new models and refreshed their offerings - but they are all more of the same - well, I guess in the case of A4 to A3, LESS of the same thing. Xerography has been around for a hundred years, melting plastic on paper is mundane and even a really cool technology like melting wax onto paper has lost its novelty.
I know, I know, MemJet is simply a fast inkjet.
They're fresh and for now, their machine is smoking fast and like no other. One more thing about MemJet - they are opening a channel specifically for and exclusively of, managed print services providers. The good folks at Memjet feel they can negate the lack of brand recognition by pairing with more sophisticated and relationship based, MpS selling professionals; dare I say, 'trusted advisors'. Resellers who have honed their skill beyond the box, earned client trust and are comfortable presenting on value, not brand.
Genius.
A few days later, we listened to Xerox earnings call.
The rest here...
Monday, January 28, 2013
Why Don't You Pay Reps Residuals on Service Contracts?
"It is time to pay sales people commission on copier service agreements. It is time to combine all volume under one agreement, on a single invoice and pay the sales person residuals for the life of the engagement."
January, 2013
One of the first rules of managed print services is consolidating the decision making process for printers with the process for copiers, bringing IT and Purchasing(or facilities) together. This usually meant getting the copier decision out of the hands of purchasing or facilities and into the realm of IT.
It was a big deal at the time and a qualification of a real managed print services opportunity - if we can't speak to the person in charge of both copiers and printers, we did not move forward. On the other hand, once we befriend an IT director, one of our guiding principles was to shift the copier decision process into IT. If the device was connected to the network, it should fall under management of the IT department.
It was a good idea and contributed to most every successful managed print services engagement.
But a funny thing happened on the way to managed print services nirvana - in an effort to fully understand managed print services, we, on the provider side, chopped up all the elements of the ecosystem. We saw managed network services as separate from managed services(?). We decided to propose MpS for printers and continue writing separate service agreements for copiers.
We dumbed down managed print services offering "advanced toner delivery services" in its stead. The printer & toner guys laid claim to MpS defining it as "printer service and supplies on a cost per image billing" sliding right into their existing model.
And the copier folks were just fine with this approach, they didn't want to change either. They didn't need to adjust the way they leased and serviced copiers, or tamper with decades old billing and invoicing policies. No need to upset the apple cart here - service departments have been running just fine - fueled by 36 to 72 months of predictable and untouchable service revenue.
It doesn't stop here.
Read the rest...
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Managed print Services: Choking on Our Own Words...
Unknown source: "I'm glad this happened..." |
January 2013, edited 2016
Think about it - in terms of the imaging, printing, and copying industry...and now throw in the Information Technology (IT) industry...
How many technology webinars...are you invited to? Do 1900 dealers need 500 webinars?
How many managed print services training classes...even come close to connecting with your reality in the field?
How many managed print services programs...teach their views, contradicting or repeating what you already know and may even do already?
How many conferences, shows...Blah, blah to the blah....does the industry need? Check out the VAR Guys' top 100 shows for 2013: Technology Event Calendar: Top 100 Channel Partner Conferences
Those who are able to see beyond the shadows and lies of their culture will never be understood, let alone believed, by the masses. - Plato
Leaders are able to discern what's sustainable and valuable from the past and what's not. It is the will of leaders to align, focus, and build cadence while releasing expectations, and tendencies to copy, compare and compete with others. Those behaviors are survival, reptilian and short-term ways of the past; weak and unsustainable in an increasingly innovative world.
True story. There is a guy in the industry that serves as a leader by copying others. He copies ideas, conversations, presentations, websites, and even locations for training with hopes of being more than he is. We'd like to thank him for being so ostentatious in his copying. He's helped us in some sort of backward way.
Have you ever seen a copy come out better than the original? No.
It's time for the death of copiers all around. Not just the machines, but how we behave, lead, act, and do. We're tasting a bit of our own medicine, and becoming uncomfortable. It's time to kill and experience the death of the...mundane. No more webinars, training classes, programs, conferences, and shows pushed out to the masses. We'll work one to one or one to a few.
Intimate. Creative. Productive.
Here's the rub -
If you are a company that hosts trade shows, your revenue streams may include charging attendees and presenters - all fine and dandy. But how transparent, let alone honest, are you if you sell tickets to an 'educational' session, that ends up being nothing more than a paid 90-minute commercial?
"That's the way it's always been done..." is not your core value, is it?
If you're a research company, one would think you would make a living conducting research and presenting findings. Then why host trade shows and train salespeople? Aren't you selling content and hosting symposiums?
Associations should derive revenue in an effort to support the improvement of their members, not chase big OEM "sponsorship".
If you're an industry publication, should you pay for content, charge for the opportunity to submit content, or take all the content you can, for free, and charge for advertising?
There's nothing unusual about any of these models, but they've become mundane; tedious, and fatiguing.
Think deeply - trades shows, white papers, copier training, MpS Seminars, and buzz are examples of us talking to ourselves.
Focus.
I've been working with end-users, and IT departments in various industries, helping them reign in costs, evaluate vendors and enhance the productivity of their IT services.
This gives us a great view of ourselves through the eyes of your customers. We've reviewed proposals from large MpS/MDS providers as well as some of the best-known IT/VARs.
We're not only listening to the presentations, but we're also hearing the "backstory". And they're not pretty. It's embarrassing.
Our industry is in a "turnaround" period, reversing, backpedaling, and on a downward turn - if anyone tells you differently, they're lying not only to you but to themselves as well.
People made this niche great.
People made this niche great.
You do know teaching people how to increase a 'share of wallet' is not sustainable, right?
Join us.
Monday, January 14, 2013
HP is Not IBM
This isn't to say that Gerstner couldn't save HP - what he accomplished back in the 90's is a case study in turnarounds. It's simply not the same environment today as it was in 1993.
There are, however, some spooky similarities between HP of today, and the IBM Gerstner inherited.
When Gerstner took over, IBM had just experienced an 8 Billion dollar loss - at that point, this was the largest corporate loss in history - their stock was down 6%. Many pundits strongly recommended breaking IBM up into "Baby Blues" - the breaking up of Big Blue, into little divisions and selling them off - being the only way IBM could survive.
IBM was the largest, most profitable computer hardware manufacturer of the day enjoying 40% margin on hardware. At the time, selling services was completely alien and new not just to IBM, but to an industry.
And that industry was dying. These words from Business Week, 1992 -
"As the monolithic mainframe gives way, the industry breaks into leaner, faster, smaller parts...
It sure looks like an industry on the skids. The signs are everywhere and grow more painful every day: Worldwide leader IBM Corp. is shedding 40,000 workers this year, for a total of 100,000 since 1985. No. 2 Digital Equipment Corp. ousts its founder, after taking $3.1 billion in charges over two years to cut 18,000 jobs and vacate 165 facilities. Wang Laboratories Inc. files for Chapter 11 protection. France's Groupe Bull lays off 8,000 workers and closes 8 of 13 factories; Italy's Olivetti downsizes by 20%; Siemens Nixdorf plans to lose 6,000 workers. And the list goes on."
Gerstner incorporated a great deal of strategies, most remember and point to a few key unusual approaches that, today, are part of every company's 'come-back plan':
Get the rest on Walters & Shutwell...
Arnold. 1993 Movie -
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Tips on starting your Consultancy.
Those once vaulted 'cruise ships' of our industry are shedding employees by the ten's of thousands. Indeed, the channel is shrinking as well.
Some think of this as a sad occurrence. Indeed, the passing of any institution is a time for reflection. But we look at this as a great emancipation: the release of so many from bondage.
A great majority, will head back into the nearest stockade in search of comfort and "stability" others will venture out, adventurous and filled with wonderlust. Nationally, one of every 15 employees, or 6.5 percent of the nation's work force, are self-employed.
So here you are - anxious, excited and ready to call all your ex-clients.
But what now? Do you use the old laptop or spring for a new device? What about a CRM, presentation tools or web presentations? Email?
In the old days, all one needed was business cards, a phone number and some shoe leather - not today.
Never before have there...read the rest here.
Sunday, January 6, 2013
How Do We Monetize Workflow?
1/2013
As far back as 1999, assessments and workflow studies were performed as a way to determine exactly where our machines fit best. They were part of a hardware play. The “study” – or assessment – became embedded into all of our sales cycles. Indeed, some sales managers used "number of assessments" as a funnel metric.
OEM training courses included feature benefits, product specification and demo scripts. The more advanced selling courses incorporated a needs assessment and cost/benefit proposal training, and for the time, those courses were pretty well received.
We attended class after class, espousing various pain points, exposing methods and techniques designed to increase your share of their wallet. Because the assessments were nothing more than a component of the selling process, we never expected to be paid for those efforts. If walking around for a few days, interviewing workers, jotting down serial numbers and printing usage reports falls under the normal responsibilities of a copier rep, why would we charge for this service?
Why? Because it is the future
I think points about volumes falling, machine installs stalling and OEMs suffering don't need to be made here. Facts are stubborn things. Print is going to fade, and if you're not planning for it now, if not years ago, your dealership will end. So, unless you are looking to cash in and live on the beach somewhere (which isn't such a bad idea), you've got to be looking beyond the horizon, and right now, realizing revenue by performing workflow services is an attractive alternative.
There are as many strategies for shifting away from boxes and over to systems/processes as there are businesses.
Let's take a look at two:
The Extreme Makeover:
* Repurpose large sections of your service department. In addition to cross-training from copier to printer (or printer to copier), invest in additional technical certifications. I would look to CompTIA.
* Uptrain your selling team. The most important area to shift is your selling team. Move away from traditional industry sales techniques. Look outside our niche.
* Reduce internal costs. Assess and optimize your own internal processes to the bone, reducing wasted time and dollars along the way.
* Position into the cloud (SaaS, HaaS, IaaS, PaaS). The field of cloud providers is ever increasing. Engage in it.
This is a radical, deep-diving, ever-expanding, "burn the ships on the beach" approach and is not for everybody. The thing is, it is better to plan disruption than to be a victim of disruption.
Hearts and Minds:
* Redesign your company value proposition. Look at your business differently and articulate the new you.
* Redesign and rebuild your compensation model to include all recurring revenue, without hardware gates. Don’t destroy innovation. Open your mind to alternative compensation models.
* Repurpose large sections of your service department. In addition to cross-training from copier to printer (or printer to copier), invest in additional technical certifications. I would look to CompTIA.
* Uptrain your selling team. The most important area to shift is your selling team. Move away from traditional industry sales techniques. Look outside our niche.
* Partner with cloud service providers (SaaS, HaaS, IaaS, PaaS). The field of cloud providers is ever increasing. Engage in it.
This approach is just as complicated – and in fact, includes some of the same steps – but it engages at a slower, more thoughtful pace and is less of a shock to the system.
Having been through the "Extreme" example, I am a fan of the "burn the ships on the beach" approach, yet I believe a combination of both approaches is ultimately best. Engage as a consultant, not a copier/MpS salesperson. This requires new talent in the field, and at first, it might mean your selling staff will actually engage as billable experts.
The goals, from a tactical standpoint
When looking to monetize workflow, our goals are reasonably simple:
1. Bill for time – before beginning an assessment or close for the project
2. Bill over time – engage at a monthly rate over a period of time, similar to a retainer.
The BIG difference
In a simple phrase, the difference between revenue from product and revenue through EDM/workflow is that the latter is recurrent versus a project-based, one-time revenue. It’s all been said before: We need to move our model from equipment- to subscription-based. But getting through a plethora of variables and determining cost models over time, which are unlike hardware-plus-service pricing structures, is difficult.
Gaining revenue from workflow is more akin to business consulting, and not many of our dealerships are set up like consulting firms. Consulting firms sustain themselves on project-based revenue billable through a statement of work and a master service agreement; this does not typically generate a great deal of revenue over time – certainly not at the levels we've come to expect from a fleet of 30,000 devices, for instance.
Barriers to entry
"The strengths of the past can hold us back." Can we reverse the mentality?
Well, here we are, in 2013. Margins and the number of devices sold are shrinking, and we're hearing a lot about “workflow” and document management.
Once again, the question comes down to this:
How do we provide these services and gain revenue? This quandary is especially poignant because, for nearly two decades, we trained an army of people not to bill for "presales" functions. This is to say, performing workflow was something we've done for free as part of the selling process. How can we change now?
Indeed, early during the latest managed print services movement, there were grumblings of how to charge for assessments. There seemed to be some traction, but the effort soon died. I credit this to our overwhelming insecurities and death-grip hold of the copier-dealer mentality: “We aren't worthy to charge for services, and we still believe in OEM quotas.”
This structure worked for decades, feeding families, employing thousands and supporting business expansion all over the globe. But those days are gone. How long can we ride the remaining 60-month service agreements?
It's time to change.
Posted on 01/04/2013
As far back as 1999, assessments and workflow studies were performed as a way to determine exactly where our machines fit best. They were part of a hardware play. The “study” – or assessment – became embedded into all of our sales cycles. Indeed, some sales managers used "number of assessments" as a funnel metric.
OEM training courses included feature benefits, product specification and demo scripts. The more advanced selling courses incorporated a needs assessment and cost/benefit proposal training, and for the time, those courses were pretty well received.
We attended class after class, espousing various pain points, exposing methods and techniques designed to increase your share of their wallet. Because the assessments were nothing more than a component of the selling process, we never expected to be paid for those efforts. If walking around for a few days, interviewing workers, jotting down serial numbers and printing usage reports falls under the normal responsibilities of a copier rep, why would we charge for this service?
Why? Because it is the future
I think points about volumes falling, machine installs stalling and OEMs suffering don't need to be made here. Facts are stubborn things. Print is going to fade, and if you're not planning for it now, if not years ago, your dealership will end. So, unless you are looking to cash in and live on the beach somewhere (which isn't such a bad idea), you've got to be looking beyond the horizon, and right now, realizing revenue by performing workflow services is an attractive alternative.
There are as many strategies for shifting away from boxes and over to systems/processes as there are businesses.
Let's take a look at two:
The Extreme Makeover:
* Repurpose large sections of your service department. In addition to cross-training from copier to printer (or printer to copier), invest in additional technical certifications. I would look to CompTIA.
* Uptrain your selling team. The most important area to shift is your selling team. Move away from traditional industry sales techniques. Look outside our niche.
* Reduce internal costs. Assess and optimize your own internal processes to the bone, reducing wasted time and dollars along the way.
* Position into the cloud (SaaS, HaaS, IaaS, PaaS). The field of cloud providers is ever increasing. Engage in it.
This is a radical, deep-diving, ever-expanding, "burn the ships on the beach" approach and is not for everybody. The thing is, it is better to plan disruption than to be a victim of disruption.
Hearts and Minds:
* Redesign your company value proposition. Look at your business differently and articulate the new you.
* Redesign and rebuild your compensation model to include all recurring revenue, without hardware gates. Don’t destroy innovation. Open your mind to alternative compensation models.
* Repurpose large sections of your service department. In addition to cross-training from copier to printer (or printer to copier), invest in additional technical certifications. I would look to CompTIA.
* Uptrain your selling team. The most important area to shift is your selling team. Move away from traditional industry sales techniques. Look outside our niche.
* Partner with cloud service providers (SaaS, HaaS, IaaS, PaaS). The field of cloud providers is ever increasing. Engage in it.
This approach is just as complicated – and in fact, includes some of the same steps – but it engages at a slower, more thoughtful pace and is less of a shock to the system.
Having been through the "Extreme" example, I am a fan of the "burn the ships on the beach" approach, yet I believe a combination of both approaches is ultimately best. Engage as a consultant, not a copier/MpS salesperson. This requires new talent in the field, and at first, it might mean your selling staff will actually engage as billable experts.
The goals, from a tactical standpoint
When looking to monetize workflow, our goals are reasonably simple:
1. Bill for time – before beginning an assessment or close for the project
2. Bill over time – engage at a monthly rate over a period of time, similar to a retainer.
The BIG difference
In a simple phrase, the difference between revenue from product and revenue through EDM/workflow is that the latter is recurrent versus a project-based, one-time revenue. It’s all been said before: We need to move our model from equipment- to subscription-based. But getting through a plethora of variables and determining cost models over time, which are unlike hardware-plus-service pricing structures, is difficult.
Gaining revenue from workflow is more akin to business consulting, and not many of our dealerships are set up like consulting firms. Consulting firms sustain themselves on project-based revenue billable through a statement of work and a master service agreement; this does not typically generate a great deal of revenue over time – certainly not at the levels we've come to expect from a fleet of 30,000 devices, for instance.
Barriers to entry
"The strengths of the past can hold us back." Can we reverse the mentality?
Well, here we are, in 2013. Margins and the number of devices sold are shrinking, and we're hearing a lot about “workflow” and document management.
Once again, the question comes down to this:
How do we provide these services and gain revenue? This quandary is especially poignant because, for nearly two decades, we trained an army of people not to bill for "presales" functions. This is to say, performing workflow was something we've done for free as part of the selling process. How can we change now?
Indeed, early during the latest managed print services movement, there were grumblings of how to charge for assessments. There seemed to be some traction, but the effort soon died. I credit this to our overwhelming insecurities and death-grip hold of the copier-dealer mentality: “We aren't worthy to charge for services, and we still believe in OEM quotas.”
This structure worked for decades, feeding families, employing thousands and supporting business expansion all over the globe. But those days are gone. How long can we ride the remaining 60-month service agreements?
It's time to change.
Posted on 01/04/2013
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