Case Study: How managed print brought savings and sanity to Southern Nazarene University’s printing environment

Case Study: How managed print brought savings and sanity to Southern Nazarene University’s printing environment

Some people have skeletons in their closets, others elephants in their rooms, but this client, who handles the information technology matters an Oklahoma City-based private university said she had an ape problem on campus. The APE “I call it the APE — which stands for anarchistic printing environment,” said Chichi Freelander, speaking of Southern Nazarene University’s 333 printers across campus. This armada of ink and toner slingers had no standard model, no standard purchasing and no standard support. “My network administrators and network technicians were becoming very frustrated with IT printing support calls — like adding surprise printers to the network or finding drivers and software to install on each machine.” The university’s chief financial officer, Scott Strawn, said sometimes the printing situation could make him take a bat to a printer — an act otherwise known as “going ‘Office Space.’” “It was so completely out of control and so many different people purchasing things, that it was very difficult to even get a hard figure on what we were actually spending,” he said, saying how eventually printer cartridges themselves became a currency. He said university staff would buy cartridges, store multiple stacks of them, as well as cases and cases of paper. It was time for a change, so that is where R.K. Black, an Oklahoma City office technology company. Discovery Freelander said the company, already having had a contract with the university for some multi-function printers, for some years had been talking with the university encouraging the school to standardize the rest of its printers and outsource its support to tame the print environment. R.K. Black’s district sales manager Gary Hackett who was the one who had been speaking with Freelander and Strawn about implementing a managed print solution when the conversation turned to Bresee Hall, the university’s administrative building. The hall had 56 printers for 54 workers. “They were doing really one-to-one — they had pretty much one printer to one associate in every office,” said Hackett. Once SNU gave R.K. Black the permission to carry out a study, he and Chris Robertson, company’s analyst, and also an SNU alumnus, performed a facility walk-through during which they touched every printing device, mapped their locations and used software to determine the best solution for the APE-like environment. Following the study, Hackett presented the university with a managed print service plan that reduced the number of the printers on campus from 333 to 118 — a two-thirds cut, something Freelander really liked. “This was very appealing to us. This is what we wanted to do,” said Freelander. Implementation and Results The university then accepted and implemented the plan and the changes became readily apparent. During the plan’s execution, Bresee Hall saw the most improvement, the number of printers being slashed 56 to 18 strategically-placed devices. But these were not the only transformations. With the installation of the new devices and capabilities, students and staff acquired a new capability with badge-based FollowMe printing technology to print from their laptops or computers to any printer on campus available to them — whether that was the dorm, lab, office or library. Not only that, but with the technology, if students decided not to release a print job, the job would not print, saving the school money in toner and paper costs. For one month alone, there were 17 reams of print jobs that did not get released,” said Freelander. “So that was quite a savings. Otherwise that paper would have wound up in the trash and in the recycle bin and would have been just a waste. Hackett said the cost savings mentioned here were significant, those 17 reams amounting to about $800 spared, not to mention the trees and other resources saved. I think at the end of the day … you can just tell that first of all, we know where we are printing,” said Strawn describing the advantages of the new managed print service. “We’ve already begun to track (our printing). I know who’s printing what. I know where my large print areas are. I know who the large print users are. We know when things ebb and flow. So from a tracking perspective, even five, six months in, I feel like we can project and think about and plan for when expenses are going to happen. I know we’ve got a good deal in term of the toner and the support and the devices,” he continued, saying he doesn’t have associates buying printers of questionable quality or having to buy printers because they are often cheaper than cartridges. So things are significantly better. If your print environment is leaving you feeling frustrated, it may be time to consider a managed print services solution.
About R.K. Black, Inc. R.K. Black, Inc. is an Oklahoma City-based, family-owned leading provider of office technology solutions to businesses in Oklahoma and Kansas. We specialize in everything business technology from copier, fax, printer and scanner technology to document management, onsite paper shredding services, VoIP phone systems and managed IT support to video surveillance solutions. If you want to learn more about us, feel free to explore the website, read our other blogs or click the button below to be contacted by one of our reps and tell you! Also, be sure to keep watching our social media channels on Facebook and Twitter for more business tips from our blog.
Document Security: Shredding alone doesnt cut it

Document Security: Shredding alone doesnt cut it

Ever hear that expression “Don’t throw out the baby with the bath water?” Well, if you’re going to get rid of a copier without checking the security of the information on its hard drives, you’re going to do exactly that.

You see, the baby in this case is all of those tax documents, human resource files, ID cards, client lists, proposals and other sensitive files that saw the light under the copier lid.

All of those images are stored on the copier in its hard-drive or hard drives — yes, they can have as many as four — and stay there until they are wiped from the drives or the drives are removed.

So when trading in a used piece of office equipment, inquire as to what will be done to protect the data on the hard drives. If you desire, as is the case with some of our clients, have the drives removed and left with you. The dealer should be able to do so for a small fee. But you may not have to go to that measure as the dealer may, as is true at RK Black, as part of its policy, automatically wipe all drives before deploying the copiers to their next sites.

Concerning computer hard drives, make sure to wipe them before disposing of them. As a last measure of protection, whenever you’re looking to hire a shredding company to destroy your paper documents, ask them if they can destroy your hard drives as well.

Often the mobile shredding truck will have a special contraption on board made specifically for hard-drive destruction. The RK Black Shredding truck’s device sends a punch through the hard drive’s casing, through the platters and out the other side, rendering the drive useless. Watch the video above.

To protect yourself, your company and coworkers from a data breach or identity theft, when you think document security, don’t just think of just paper shredding or network firewalls as the only means to ensuring your safety. Think about every piece of equipment bearing a hard-drive in your office. Make sure its wiped or destroyed when it leaves for the last time, because as the saying goes “Dead men tell no tales.”

If you are interested in R.K. Black Shredding, contact us! Also, be sure to keep watching our social media channels on Facebook and Twitter for more business tips from our blog.