How to Buy
a Business Printer
In selecting an office printer, you have
many choices to make: single-function or all-in-one, colour or monochrome, and
more. Of all the ways you can slice and dice printers into categories, the most
significant distinction is between printers meant for the home and those meant
for the office. Here are the key questions to ask as they apply to office
printers.
Do
you need a single-function printer (MFP)?
Consider whether you'd rather have separate
devices for faxing, copying, scanning
and printing versus a single machine that does it all. At a minimum, an
MFP combines a printer and scanner and works as a copier as well. For an office
MFP, you'll probably want one that also
works as a stand alone fax machine. Advantages of MFPs include cost and space
savings, as well as integration of some features. On the other hand,
single-function printers are optimized for certain tasks that your business may
require. Laser printers for general office use are usually faster than
comparably priced MFPs.
Do
you really need colour?
If you never print anything but letters and
monochrome documents, there's no reason to spend money on colour. When
considering whether you need colour, though, keep in mind that many colour lasers
can print at high-enough quality to let you produce your own advertising
handouts and trifold brochures. If you tend to print only a few hundred copies
of this sort of output at a time, doing it yourself can save substantial
amounts of money compared with printing small quantities at your local print
shop
How
big a printer are you comfortable with?
Just because something is called a desktop printer doesn't mean it's
small enough that you'd want it on your desk. Even a printer with a small footprint can be tall
enough for you to feel as if it's towering over you. Be sure to check out the size
How are you going to
connect?
Most printers designed for the office include both USB and Ethernet
ports, but you may prefer a
Wireless connection, particularly in a home office. Keep in mind,
though, that if you have a wireless
access point on your network, you can print wirelessly from your
computer to any printer on that network, whether the printer itself offers a
wireless connection or not.
What level of output
quality do you need?
Printers vary significantly in output quality. Check out text,
graphics, and photos separately, since high quality for one kind of output doesn't necessarily mean high
quality for the others. For office use, you probably want the kind of crisp, clean edges for
text and line graphics that you can only get from a laser printer. But consider also whether you need
graphics and photos that are merely good enough for internal business use, or whether you need
high-enough quality to print your own marketing materials.
How
much speed do you need?
If almost everything you print is one or two pages, you probably
don't need a fast printer. But if you
print a lot of longer documents, speed is more important. In that case, be sure
you're judging speed by actual through put. Most importantly, note that you
can't compare claimed speeds for inkjets with claimed speeds for lasers.
How much do you print?
Figure out how much you print by how often you buy paper and in what
amounts. Then pick a printer designed to print at least much. Unfortunately,
this isn't as simple as it could be. Contrary to what most people think, a
printer's maximum monthly duty cycle isn't the maximum you should be printing.
It's the maximum you can print without damaging the printer. Some manufacturers
state a recommended maximum in addition to a maximum duty cycle. For those that
don't, you can follow the (very rough)
rule of thumb of picking a printer whose maximum duty cycle is at least three
times the number of pages you print per month. Also consider input capacity.
The rule of thumb here is to pick a printer with enough capacity to let you add
paper no more than once a week. There are other paper-handling issues, too:
Check the minimum and maximum paper size and if you need to print on both sides
even occasionally, make sure the printer has an automatic duplexer.
How much does it cost?
0 comments:
Post a Comment