Sunday Times

Nashua embraces cloud to blaze service-based paper trail

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IT has become a cliché to say that the paperless office is a myth, and that office printers will still be with us for the next decade. But that doesn’t mean there is room for complacenc­y. In fact, the printer industry faces as much disruption as any overturned by the proverbial “Uber of (insert industry sector here)”.

Nashua, South Africa’s best-known office equipment supplier, has quietly changed its positionin­g from being an office automation supplier to being a provider of “managed document services and digital office automation printing products”.

Nashua MD Mark Taylor says: “If we’re only going to sell office automation products, we’re dead.

“We’ve got between three and 10 years to make the shift, depending on the pace of change and ICT players modifying their businesses to compete with us.”

The challenge lies more in how to make the shift than in what shift to make. The rise of software-as-a-service, where software no longer has to be installed on site but is used via the cloud, points the way.

“Our thinking is that you now get software-as-a-service and hardware-as-a-service.

“How do we offer you office-as-a-service?”

This sounds like a massive threat to a business like Nashua — and its product catalogue confirms how much still revolves around machines. But Taylor says it will look very different in just a few years.

The company’s business will move to managed services, cloud-based services, network services, desktop services, location-based services and device management.

The implicatio­ns for revenue are massive, he says, but manufactur­ers are already facing the new reality.

“HP and Xerox have sold off their hardware businesses. Ricoh has made an acquisitio­n in the software space. I wonder how companies like ours will transition effectivel­y when we no longer have the cash flow we get today from office equipment.

“We have to transition from typically making our three-year profit upfront today, to making nothing upfront.”

The cost of running an office automation business will plummet. And that is as much of a threat as an opportunit­y.

“In future you will need far less cash to start a business like this, meaning more competitor­s, but economies of scale become an issue. Margins become really good when you get to scale, but if you don’t have scale, you cannot exist.

“The barriers to entry to sell other people’s products drop because you don’t have to have stock, you just need to find customers and connect them to the service,” he says.

Ironically, however, cloudbased services could boost printing output. Taylor gives the example of production print — in-house printing of books and magazines — moving to “mass customisat­ion of one”.

He says: “In the past you had to print at least 300 t0 400 books to get economies of scale that made sense. Now you can do one book at a time. There are trials at airports where you put money in a vending machine, select a publicatio­n, and it prints the latest magazine. You don’t even need storage.”

Production print is growing 10% a year, and is now becoming accessible to small business. And that gives paper yet another new lease of life.

“For at least the next 10 years, paper will still be a dominant medium. Roughly 80 000 machines are being sold in South Africa every year, and that won’t change for the next five years.”

Goldstuck is the founder of World Wide Worx and editor-inchief of Gadget.co.za. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram @art2gee

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