The theme of the 2010 North American MPS Conference was "Change".
Change is pretty certain and if you've been in the MPS arena for the last three years, you have sure seen a lot of it.
For me it looks like we have settled into a good understanding of the first 2 stages of MPS Adaption: Control and Optimize.
There is a huge amount of business and profit nestled into both stages, but I wonder if we are forgetting this is only the beginning.
It is really no surprise that Stage 3 is turning out to be a bit tricky for some to get their minds around.
Indeed, the easiest application of this stage, Enhance the Business process, is traditional EDM packages. If you know the difference between and performed both a document-flow and work-flow analysis, you are waist-deep into EDM/The Third Stage.
In my humble opinion, if all we do is provide supplies and equipment management services, we are not reaching the full, MPS potential.
This is one reason I reject the typical "assessment" - it is mostly, usually, simply an inventory of equipment and a recording of static data around the fleet.
The simple stuff.
What really frosts my fritters is the fact that almost every assessment is, or should be, a business process survey - but most don't see it that way.
The assessment is the cornerstone of every MPS engagement. All too often the engagement starts and STOPS with the assessment.
Don't be afraid of Business Process Optimization, you are probably already walking right by it, during every site assessment you perform.
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Monday, May 31, 2010
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Citi Reiterates a 'Buy' on Hewlett-Packard (HPQ); Confidence in Near-Term & Long-Term Growth Outlook
May 28, 2010 9:37 AM EDT
Citi reiterates a 'Buy' on Hewlett-Packard Co (NYSE: HPQ), price target $65.
Citi analyst says, "We reiterate a Buy on HP’s shares following a day of meetings with the co’s Imaging and Printing (IPG) management in San Diego. During the meeting, IPG management outlined its strategy for sustained IPG growth beyond the current recovery, with core distributed inkjet and laser printer growth (80-85% of IPG revenue) driven by emerging markets and share gains and non-core growth driven by Managed Print Services (MPS), Commercial/Graphic Arts, retail kiosks and minilabs (2,400 storefronts currently going to ~7000 by year-end) and workflow solutions."
Citi reiterates a 'Buy' on Hewlett-Packard Co (NYSE: HPQ), price target $65.
Citi analyst says, "We reiterate a Buy on HP’s shares following a day of meetings with the co’s Imaging and Printing (IPG) management in San Diego. During the meeting, IPG management outlined its strategy for sustained IPG growth beyond the current recovery, with core distributed inkjet and laser printer growth (80-85% of IPG revenue) driven by emerging markets and share gains and non-core growth driven by Managed Print Services (MPS), Commercial/Graphic Arts, retail kiosks and minilabs (2,400 storefronts currently going to ~7000 by year-end) and workflow solutions."
Friday, May 28, 2010
Year Two: Managed Print Services Focuses on Change
Ed posted this over at ChannelWeb, here.
I commented, and then I cut and pasted - enjoy.
--------------------
Ed Crowley
Posted by Ed Crowley on May 28, 2010 1:43:34 PM
The first North American Managed Print Services (MPS) conference was launched in April of 2009 amidst the very ugly depths of the economic crises of 08-09 at a time when other conferences were seeing their attendance fall by 50% or more.
Many skeptics debated whether this would be a huge failure, or at best, moderately successful. Well, the first conference ended with 35% more attendees than planned, tremendous excitement and enthusiasm, and the formation of the Managed Print Services Association (MPSA).
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Managed Print Services - "How to Sell MPS". A Willing Audience, until Bluto Smashes the Guitar
The crooner strums.
A willing audience smiles, and rocks to the expected, comfortable melodies.
PowerPoint slides confirm student's expectations - this is what they paid for. To hear, "all is not lost". You're going to be ok, MPS is easy. As long as you have a plan. Our plan.
Oh, and our plan takes 18 weeks and $3,500.00 bucks.
The instructor, talking about cherries that have no stones, stories that have no end.
All going according to plan.
Attendees oblivious to the obvious, this guy doesn't know crap.
But the words sound so nice.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Managed Print Services Conference 2010 - See It All, again and again...
I imagine, somewhere in an underground bunker, the Photizo Clan has initiated the Countdown Clock for MPS-Con/2011
Until then, or Barcelona, we can stream video of the MPS Titans(excluding myself).
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