By Juergen Krebs, Software Sales Manager, Ricoh Graphic Communications, Ricoh Europe
How seamless is your order intake? What percentage of your jobs involve high margin variable data printing? Where are your bottlenecks?
By Juergen Krebs, Software Sales Manager, Ricoh Graphic Communications, Ricoh Europe
How seamless is your order intake? What percentage of your jobs involve high margin variable data printing? Where are your bottlenecks?
By Erwin Busselot, Director Business Innovation & Solutions, Ricoh Graphic Communications, Ricoh Europe
Traditional direct mail continues to play a valuable role in customer communications, and in fact often acts as a vital link to digital engagement.
By Erwin Busselot, Director Business Innovation & Solutions, Ricoh Graphic Communications, Ricoh Europe
In the face of a very challenging environment, impacted by higher costs, demand for the faster turnaround of increasingly complex jobs, and a shortage of skills, digital print remains buoyant for a number of reasons.
By Montserrat Petit, founder & managing director of the marketing agency MOND
In today’s world, we are constantly bombarded with all kinds of information in all possible formats, shapes, colours and sounds. Our brains receive thousands of messages every day and are constantly switching from one topic to another.
By Sander Sondaal, Director Commercial Print Sales, Ricoh Graphic Communications, Ricoh Europe
Escalating costs, greater development of sustainable practices, and enhancing customer engagement are among the market pressures shaping strategy for today’s marketers, print buyers, and brands.
By Juergen Krebs, Software Sales Manager, Ricoh Graphic Communications, Ricoh Europe
We all know from experience how inefficiency wastes time and money. That is why operational efficiency matters.
By Craig Lewis, Corporate & Indirect Sales, Ricoh Graphic Communications, Ricoh Europe
All businesses strive for success but what happens when the ability to manage increased demand is constrained by existing infrastructure that can’t keep up?
IMI Europe announces a new location for its popular InnoLAE (Innovations in Large Area Electronics) Conference. InnoLAE 2024 will be held at Cripps Court, Magdalene College, Cambridge, UK on 21-22 February 2024, with short courses on LAE technologies held the day before.
In the summer of 1999, I was just starting my doctoral program at Virginia Tech. My advisor Mark Sanders, who many of you know, highly suggested I drive up to Ferris State University for this IGAEA conference. The idea of driving to Michigan in an old Pathfinder that did not have air conditioning did not excite me. Nor did the idea of staying in a dorm without air conditioning. Nonetheless, I drove up to Ferris State University and it was the first of many IGAEA/GCEA conference for me. While at my first conference I definitely felt a little out of place, but I soon got over that and was welcomed by the members and I am still friends with several of those members that I first met at my first conference. The conference was very exciting to me. I was just getting into teaching, and it gave me a lot of ideas to bring to the classroom. More importantly I think it provided the social context and the peer interaction that I truly value at conferences still today. To me a conference is not just about the presentations, but also about the face-to-face interaction and discussions that take place between the attendees.
Since going to that first conference, I have been to many more and loved each of the conferences I have been to. I have been to conferences in Pennsylvania, California, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, North Carolina, South Carolina, Nevada, Texas, and this summer I am looking forward to being in Rhode Island. As many of the old members might remember, I saw the USA the IGAEA way.
The summer 2023 GCEA conference will be held on the campus of the Rhode Island School of Design, in Providence, RI. The dates for the conference are Sunday, July 16 to Thursday, July 20.
By Erwin Busselot, Director, Business Innovation & Solutions, Ricoh Graphic Communications, Ricoh Europe
“Measure what is measurable and make measurable what is not so,” was reportedly said by Italian astronomer, physicist, and engineer Galileo Galilei.