The large-format market remains a niche one for
the average BTA dealer and finding BTA dealers who
are doing well in this area can sometimes be like
searching for a needle in a haystack. After a fair
amount of baling, we found four dealers who have
achieved various measures of success in this
market. This segment may not represent a huge
portion of their business, but it helps them
position their dealerships as a one-stop shop for
customers who might also need a large-format
device in addition to traditional office
technology such as printers and MFPs. While a lot
can be learned from those who are successful,
there’s much to learn from those who are still
struggling with the segment as well.

Advanced
Imaging Solutions in South Bend, Indiana hasn’t
done too badly selling large format systems.
Although they sell Canon, Lanier, and HP, more
often than not they lead with Canon. These
products are primarily sold by traditional sales
reps and not just to traditional large-format type
accounts.
“You have to look at a different
place for large-format prospects and by that I
mean we find it’s almost an add-on sale in a lot
of our accounts where we didn’t even know they had
an application for large format,” says Stephen
Klett, president. “That’s not necessarily true
when you talk about engineers and architects and
vertical markets where there’s a bigger need.”
Klett has found that customers with
large-format color applications provide Advanced
with new opportunities too.
“In the past, some of those larger firms
outsourced their marketing and printing of
documents because they couldn’t get the quality
they wanted, whereas now it’s affordable and they
can do it in house,” says Klett.
One
client who sells RVs uses a large-format device to
create displays with the specifications for
display next to the vehicles.
“I don’t think
that sort of application existed three or four or
five years ago,” says Klett.
The market for
large-format is still largely a niche one as one
might expect and profits tend to be modest at
best.
“Because manufacturers don’t need to
sell the product through a dealer distribution
network, they’ve purposely made the margins
substantially lower,” says Klett. “I make 15-20
percent at retail on a large-format Canon unit. We
don’t go below list price most of the time because
they purposely left the margin real low in order
to be competitive with HP in that arena.”
Why
is Advanced selling more Canon large-format
devices compared to the other manufacturers
Advanced represents?
“The quality of the
images,” says Klett. “We even use it internally
for our own marketing materials.”
If you
visit Advanced you’ll see posters with
motivational messages in the sales area, all
created on a Canon large-format device.
Even though they lead with the Canon,
price-sensitive customers usually opt for the HP.
“HP has traditionally been a lower entry
point with a higher operating cost so somebody who
goes on the HP Website or a Website that handles
HP printers will see a $3,500 large-format device,
and because of the low investment up front they
buy it the same as if they were buying a $200
printer.”
Klett feels Advanced would sell
more large-format products if they placed more
focus on it, a sentiment shared by other dealers.
“We find that specialists typically are the
most effective sales people. They learn the
vertical markets, the applications, and the
customer pain points. If we did that, I could see
having a large-format expert.”
Advanced did
hire a large-format expert a number of years ago,
but at that time found they couldn’t get enough
business with a high enough gross profit to
support that position. Today it might be a
different story. While margins may be tight, Klett
still feels there’s opportunity.
“I don’t
want to sound like you can’t make money selling
large format because color [supplies] are where
the money’s at after the sale,” he says.

Blue
Technologies in Cleveland, Ohio has been selling
the KIP large-format device for about three years
now, mostly through their traditional sales reps
along with an application specialist who
understands the market. It wasn’t easy getting
this portion of the business off the ground,
mainly because reps were intimidated by the
product.
“It took us a good six months to
get started and doing what we really wanted to do
with it,” says Keith Stump, Vice President of
Sales. “On the surface it’s ink on bigger paper.
You still hit ‘Print’ and go. It’s the same
process. But when you transition from small format
to wide format the mentality of the rep seems to
change.”
Blue Technologies continues to
train to educate their territory and major account
sales people to track down opportunities. Once
they find a ‘live’ one, the application specialist
is brought into the picture.
“They know
what they’re doing, have knowledge of the types of
industries, they know how to use [the device], and
can make the machine and software sing and dance,”
says Stump.
Blue Technologies settled on
this approach by learning from their production
print [business] with Konica Minolta.
“It’s a different market, different expertise
level, and the bottom line is we were biting off
more than we could chew with the expectation we
were going to get our typical territory rep to be
able to grasp and know everything they truly need
to know in order to sell the product,”
acknowledges Stump. “We focused on getting them
trained, and educated them on how to hunt
opportunities for the product.”
He’s found
opportunities for large format in both new and
existing accounts.
“It definitely opens up
some new doors,” says Stump. “The reps who are
better at selling the full concept of the company,
ECM, wide format, MPS, are better at selling that
whole program than the ones who are better at
uncovering [opportunities], whether it be a
large-format or a plotter, opportunity.”
The biggest challenge of getting his sales force
up to speed was getting the reps to understand
that this is simply just ink on wider paper.
“There’s an initial fear on the part of the
sales person because they’re going into more of an
industry specific application, maybe dealing with
more of an engineering crowd even though most of
our business is outside of that typical
engineering/construction segment,” says Stump. “It
tends to be more embedded within companies that
make or build things.”
While Blue
Technologies selected KIP because of their
partnership with Konica Minolta, there was another
reason why they added the line.

“We
did our research and it seemed to be a top-shelf
product in that category,” states Stump.
As
far as service and support from the manufacturer,
Stump offers nothing but kudos.
“Let’s put
it this way: our service managers love the
product. It runs well and doesn’t require a lot of
maintenance.”
At this point Blue
Technologies has about 100 of these devices in the
field.
“I think we’re doing okay, but not
knocking the cover off the ball,” says Stump. “It
would definitely help if we could find the right
industry sales professional that can work it.”
Stump’s key application expert’s expertise is
in production print, which translates nicely to
large format.
“The methodologies are
similar such as understanding workflow,” he
explains. “When you’re in production print, we
find it’s really less about the engines and more
about the structure of the environment and
workflow. We’re EFI’s number one Micropress
reseller and that’s all based on understanding
what’s happening in architecting a solution. Large
format really has a lot to do with that,
especially with the software features now
available with the KIP product.”
Large
format remains a niche product category at WJS
Enterprises in Metairie, LA. Canon is their
wide-format brand although they may be upping the
ante at the high end by complementing their Canon
offerings with Océ large-format devices.
“It’s an upper-end product especially if you’re
going to use it as a copier rather than a
printer,” says Russ Jacketti, vice president of
sales.
Jacketti has no major revelations
to share when it comes to successfully selling
large-format.
“We’ve had some success, but
most of the business we get on wide format comes
from our customer base,” he says. “We have some
engineers, architects, and we do have a couple of
non-profits who use them for signage.”

WJS’s
traditional sales reps are responsible for selling
the product as opposed to a large-format
specialist.
“There’s not really enough
potential for a specialist, at least in our area,”
states Jacketti.
When WJS initially began
carrying large format the training came directly
from Canon. Now, WJS updates the skill sets of
their reps with info provided by Canon.
At
this point, WJS’s large-format business has been
steady.
“We’re not seeing a lot of growth,” concedes
Jacketti. “Part of the reason is we probably
aren’t concentrating on it the way so many other
companies do. We’ve been able to penetrate a
couple of accounts because of it over the years,
and we’ve been carrying it for quite some time. We
have a couple of accounts where we’ve integrated
with the [Canon] Colortrac system where they’re
using it as a printer, copier and wide-format
scanner. It’s kind of, for lack of a better term,
a shotgun approach.”
The biggest challenge
in selling large format is one that many dealers
can identify with—the lack of concentration by
sales reps on this product category and not having
a specialist to focus on it.
“To go in and
penetrate some of the higher-volume accounts the
skill set has to be greater because of the
competition that concentrates solely on wide
format,” emphasizes Jacketti.
Another
obstacle is time.
“We’re constantly
training just to keep up with our core products
and that’s where we’re making money. When we sell
[large format], it’s okay, but it’s very difficult
to specialize in all these different areas. If we
did get more into it and brought in a specialist
we would definitely go with the Océ product to
complement the Canon product,” concludes Jacketti.

The
ultimate advice for success in the large-format
space comes from Andrew Ritschel, President of
Electronic Office Systems (EOS) in Fairfield, New
Jersey. They carry KIP, Kyocera, and Ricoh
large-format products as well as Canon and HP
plotters.
Andrew Ritschel
His first recommendation is to have a
dedicated sales rep that focuses on working the
vertical markets that buy large-format equipment.
“Your down-the-street reps are going to
stumble across their customers who might ask them
about it when they’re selling MFPs, but a
dedicated rep will seek out the engineering
department, the CAD manager, the engineering
office inside large buildings, and they will go
outside your normal engineer, architectural, and
construction company people who are the

typical
people who buy wide format,” says Ritschel.
He emphasizes that this person must be
knowledgeable about the entire large-format
product line the dealership carries and that there
are usually four to six products in any
wide-format manufacturer’s product line.
Ritschel didn’t start out with a dedicated rep,
but learned from experience why that position is
critical. He also believes a dedicated rep should
sell more than just hardware.
“They should
also sell document management software that can be
packaged with the wide-format product to enhance
the sale and add another dimension of what to
speak about when talking to the customer to
distinguish himself from the day-to-day box rep
because there are too many box reps who are
handling wide-format equipment,” emphasizes
Ritschel.
A quota of four to six units per
month is also essential in his opinion.

“Selling one unit a month just by happenstance or
a couple of units a month is not good enough,”
states Ritschel. “Having low expectations or no
expectations is not good.”
Other Ritschel
recommendations include having a large base of
units already in the field along with the ability
to sell color toner-based or solid-ink color
machines to specialty users.
“These
products have higher margins and it’s a more
in-depth sale, so you can get paid for your
expertise about those products,” opines Ritschel.
“A down- the-street rep isn’t going to be able to
do that.”
Another secret to large-format
success is selling inkjet plotters only in
addition to dry toner LED machines.
“Do
not waste time selling inkjets because you won’t
make the margins because you’re going to be
competing with B&H Photo and Amazon.”
Some
recommendations are beyond a dealer’s control such
as being lucky enough to be in a secondary or
tertiary market where you don’t have Ricoh
branches, IKON branches, Toshiba branches, Konica
Minolta branches or Sharp branches selling
products for $300-$500 over their actual costs.
“That hurts the marketplace and the
industry,” contends Ritschel. “Sharp, Toshiba, and
Konica Minolta are all selling KIP products as
well as the Kyocera branches. This marketplace has
been tremendously hurt by KIP selling their
product to manufacturer’s branches and every
dealer associated with that manufacturer. And IKON
and Ricoh are just doing whatever they can to blow
out the Ricoh product line.”
On the
leasing front, he adds, “Make points by financing
[large format] with leases. Build in some extra
points on it.”
His final word of advice:
“Do not include toner and paper in your cost per
square foot charge. You will get eaten alive.”
Scott Cullen has been writing about
the office technology industry since 1986.