Whitepapers

Charging Back: Making Color Pay For Itself

Charging Back: Making Color Pay For Itself One way to control your costs for color printing is to charge them back to those who are doing the printing. Charging back these costs can help reduce operational costs in two ways.

1. Internal users who are billed for all or some of their color printing are likely to be more aware of, and more mindful about, how much they print—and, as a result, more judicious in their use of printing resources. This can result in less usage.

2. By billing external users, organizations can eliminate, or at least significantly reduce, the color printing and copying costs that they normally absorb on behalf of their clients or patrons.

Opportunities to charge back color printing In addition to charging back color printing costs to internal and external users, organizations can charge back by group or individual. Opportunities
for charging back might include: continue reading...

  • departments within a larger organization
  • offices in remote locations
  • clients of professional firms
  • individual users of institutional resources

Color and Black-and-White Printing: What’s the Difference?

color and black and white printing What’s the difference between color and black-and-white printing? It may seem like a simple question on the surface. But when it comes to everyday office printing, there are more differences between the two than you may realize—in cost, technology, functionality and other factors—and more similarities, too. If you’re thinking about incorporating more color into your office printing environment, you need to understand all these differences and similarities in order to make effective (not to mention cost-effective) choices.

“To put color print pricing in context, in 1994 a typical departmental-sized black-and-white laser printer would cost you around $5000 with a per-page price of about 8 or 9 cents. For less than that cost today, you can have a high-quality color printer. The idea that color is too expensive for in-house, everyday use is as antiquated as that 1994 black-and-white laser printer.”

–Don Jones, The Definitive Guide to Office Color Printing continue reading...

Communicating Better with Color

Communicating Better with Color Did you hear the one a few years back about the intern who faxed some charts to a team of reviewers in advance of a meeting—with a cover note directing their attention to the figures in green? Quite a faux pas in the days before color faxes. But it’s no joke: Color can be one of the most powerful tools at an organization’s disposal when it comes to organizing information, increasing understanding, and making people and operations more productive and efficient. And today, the technology for color printing to help achieve these ends is more advanced, accessible and affordable than ever.

“If you want to understand how color impacts us, next time you get in the car, take note of how you stop at red and go on green. Color plays a big role in persuasion. We should understand its value.”

–Bryan Eisenberg, ”The Color of Money,” ClickZ Network continue reading...

HP Color Planning Guide

2009-11-09_185013 Color in the workplace—it’s here to stay.

Color printing is a powerful tool that is now considered a mainstay in most organizations—from everyday printing to high-end production. In fact, the question in most organizations of all sizes is not whether to incorporate color into their printing and imaging activities, but what choices to make to best fit their needs.

The good news is that determining the right color printing and imaging choices doesn’t have to be a daunting task. This guide will help you determine the HP products you need to create a productive, efficient color printing and imaging environment. continue reading...

Using Color Access Controls To Maximize Value

2009-11-30_183346 Organizations that are incorporating color into their printing and imaging environments would like to be able to control access to color printing in order to maximize the return on their investments in color. This doesn’t simply mean limiting access to color, or placing controls on who uses color and who does not, although there is certainly value for some organizations in being able to do just that. But controlling access to color also means being able to monitor how color is used and to track usage by a variety of criteria, in order to make informed decisions that affect operational efficiency. And for some organizations, controlling access to color may also mean accurately determining color usage in order to bill clients or internal users for their usage. Applying color access controls in any or all of these ways enables organizations to use color as effectively and cost-efficiently as possible. continue reading...

Getting the Most from Digital Send Technology

2009-12-21_181939 The reality is that the paperless office has not yet arrived, and it probably won’t anytime soon. But that doesn’t mean you can’t improve the way you share, edit, print, store and retrieve documents. This planner is designed to help you understand how to use digital send technology to improve productivity, enhance competitiveness and reduce costs by streamlining the way you digitize and share documents.

Think about it: a quick look at some of the problems caused by working with paper documents in an increasingly digital world and how digital sending technology can address them.

Act on it: workflow-, operations- and document handling-specific checklists to help you determine if digital send technology is right for your organization.

Work with it: tips to help you seamlessly integrate digital send technology into your organization’s day-to-day processes.
Get help with it: a quick overview of HP’s comprehensive family of digital send hardware, software and services solutions. continue reading...

Success Story: HP LaserJet 1200N and Capella Technologies –The Perfect New Treatment for Grove Hill Medical Center’ Printing Ailments

2009-12-23_192417 “Our focus has always been on providing the very best treatment for our patients,” commented Carl Labbadia, Grove Hill’s Director of Information Systems (IS). “At times this has meant that our energies have not always been directed at remaining on the leading edge of information technology. For the last 12 years, with attention being paid to other areas of optimizing patient care, we’ve ran the same legacy billing and appointment management system.”

He continued, “Each of our eight locations were connected using a proprietary local area transport protocol and we had over 100 dot-matrix printers, distributed across all of the offices to print patients’ Encounter forms. These forms cover standard information, such as name, date of birth, physician’s name, and lists of common procedures with associated diagnoses for medical staff to check-off and were printed on two-part, pre-printed stationary.“

Encounter forms were created for every patient visit – totaling over 5,000 forms each day. “There were multiple disadvantages with the old infrastructure,” recalled Labbadia. “The technology had become costly to manage and maintain. Fifteen percent of my technicians’ time was spent supporting and repairing the old dot-matrix printers. continue reading...

HP Digital Sending And Document Capture

2009-12-30_203007 Far too often office workflow processes are inefficient, manual, and expensive. The Association for Information and Image Management estimates upwards of 90% of all business information is still held on paper. And according to IDC, business professionals spend 60% of their time handling paper-based documents, plus more than 40% of internal office communication is still handled via hardcopy. IDC also reports producing, distributing, and storing documents accounts for up to 40% of an organization’s labor costs and 15% of its revenue. With U.S.-based businesses spending up to $100 billion per year processing paper, according to IDC estimates, the paperless office so sought after in the 1990s remains an elusive myth for the vast majority of organizations.

While you may never be able to eliminate paper entirely from the equation, innovative HP digital-sending and document-capture technology lets you incorporate hardcopy documents into an electronic infrastructure that streamlines decentralized, paper-intense business processes and workflows to help you:

• Reduce operational costs – Automating manual paperwork processes can significantly reduce costs since users are able to share electronic copies of documents quickly without relying on interoffice mail, couriers, or regular mail. The scan-to-email functionality inherent in every HP MFP, scanner, and digital sender also eliminates the need for standalone fax machines, for which the dedicated phone lines alone typically cost $30-50 each per month. In addition, HP digital-sending and document-capture solutions free up increasingly valuable real estate currently dedicated to storing and archiving paper documents. continue reading...

HP Security Solutions FAQ

2010-01-05_162214 The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology has instituted a security checklist program. Checklists can be developed not only by IT vendors, but also by consortia,  cademia, industry, federal agencies and other governmental organizations, as well as other entities in the public and private sectors. A security configuration checklist (sometimes referred to as a lockdown guide, hardening guide or benchmark configuration) is essentially a document that contains instructions or procedures for configuring an IT product to a baseline level of security. Many technology devices have approved security checklists. However, HP is the first printer/MFP manufacturer to have a security checklist approved and published by NIST. Unlike other certifications, which often certify only certain features, the checklist program locks down or secures the entire MFP solution.

HP considers security checklists as a means to significantly improve the security capabilities' ease of configuration for imaging and printing products. HP submitted a security checklist for the HP LaserJet 4345 and 4370 printers in September 2006. At the time of submission, HP was the only hardcopy manufacturer to submit a checklist for review. HP plans to develop additional checklists for hardcopy devices in the future.
A checklist might include any of the following:
• Configuration files that automatically set various security settings (e.g., executables, security templates that modify settings, scripts)
• Documentation (e.g., text file) that guides the checklist user to manually configure software
• Documents that explain the recommended methods to securely install and configure a device
• Policy documents that set forth guidelines for such things as auditing, authentication security (e.g., passwords), and perimeter security continue reading...

New Frontiers In Color Printing

2010-01-08_144644 Innovations from Hewlett-Packard have had a tremendous impact on color printing. Now, the company’s long history of innovation is taking another significant turn with the introduction of HP Edgeline Technology.

The Advantages of HP Edgeline Technology

HP Edgeline Technology is an ink-based printing engine designed with printheads that span the width of a page. Basically, this means that instead of the printheads having to move across the paper, the paper itself moves. This results in several important benefits for color printing users.

Increased speed.

Because ink is dispersed across the entire width of the page as the paper passes beneath the printheads, printer speeds are among the fastest in their class.

Print-shop-quality output.

The use of large, stationary printheads enables more accurate ink-drop placement, which in turn, enables extremely crisp color output. The printheads have 10,560 nozzles each for precise ink delivery. continue reading...