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Paper Chase - Macintosh and OSX in business
Apple Computer ^ | 12/10/2004 | Joe Cellini

Posted on 12/10/2004 9:04:47 PM PST by Swordmaker

Sir Speedy Storefront

Nothing’s Impossible. Documents arrive at Sir Speedy in virtually
any shape or format, but Sir Speedy’s response is always the same:
“We can handle it.”

Even on a good day, quick printing is a tricky business. Any designer or production editor at Sir Speedy’s nearly 1,000 quick print centers can tell you a story about mismatched fonts or misbegotten files — like the 12-page, 4-color newsletter generated entirely in a customer’s favorite spreadsheet application.

Documents arrive at Sir Speedy in virtually any shape, size, format, medium or condition — it’s a daunting business proposition. But Sir Speedy’s response is always the same: “We can handle it.”

Pixel to Paper

“We’ve been doing this for more than 30 years, so we’re very good at putting ink on paper,” says Walter Kozlov, Director of Development at Sir Speedy, Inc., a quick print franchisor with the world’s largest network of printing and copying centers.

Nearly everyone in Sir Speedy Corporate uses Macs, which means I can spend less time training new corporate employees and more time in the field helping franchisees.”

Indeed, since the mid-80s, when the company forsook traditional typesetting for electronic publishing on Macs, they’ve become really good at wringing ink from zeroes and ones. Currently, eighty to ninety percent of the documents brought to Sir Speedy franchises are computer-generated.

Because the company persistently hones its technological edge — most recently with an upgrade to Mac OS X — it’s equally well set up for pixels or pages, coming and going. On any given day, the franchises can push as many digital documents as their several hundred thousand business clients can dish through batteries of Power Mac G5s to paper, the Web or anything in between.

Bottom Line Logic

Kozlov, a 17-year veteran of Sir Speedy’s parent company, Franchise Services, Inc., points out that Macs arrived at Sir Speedy before he did, but that their use has broadened considerably since.

“We use Macs at our corporate office for everyday administrative tasks and to create marketing materials for franchisee use,” says Kozlov. “The franchises use the Macs for ‘print for pay.’”

At company headquarters in Mission Viejo, CA, Kozlov wears several hats: managing network infrastructure, including FTP, web and email services; directing software development of intranet applications; and training employees, both at headquarters and in the franchises.

But his most important job is to make his “clients” — the franchisees — more ready to acquire and service their own customers: “In other businesses you have a product and your corporate staff is doing whatever it can to get that product sold,” he says. “In our business, our product is our franchisee. Frankly, if they don’t make money, we don’t make money.”

That bottom line logic serves as well to underscore Kozlov’s technology preferences. “Nearly everyone in Sir Speedy Corporate uses Macs,” he says, “which means I can spend less time training new corporate employees and more time in the field helping franchisees.”

Frontline Support

Walter Kozlov

Walter Kozlov.
We’ve been doing this for more than
30 years, so we’re very good at putting
ink on paper.”

Because franchise profitability is so critical for corporate success, the company puts its Macs predominantly where its money is — in the field, in the hands of graphic artists and designers. A typical franchise deploys three Power Mac computers and one or more PCs, with the Macs used for creative design work and the PCs for opening and outputting customer-supplied PC files.

The fit, says Kozlov, is natural: “Historically, Apple’s focus has been on the publishing market. They’ve always understood the complexities of desktop publishing, building technologies like ColorSync to assist in reliably reproducing color and AppleScript to ease repetitive tasks, while embracing PostScript to ensure the best possible output quality.”

Easy Migration

Given the direct relationship of uptime to throughput in the quick print business, moving the entire company quickly to Mac OS X, with its promise of enhanced stability, was a no-brainer.

And the changeover at headquarters was quick work. “It was a lot easier to do on the inside because we have a standardized package of applications, and I control that. About three years ago we began testing and learning the new OS. By May of this year we’d replaced our corporate machines with new iMacs and moved everyone to version 10.3. Our transition was painless.”

Moving to Mac OS X means they don’t crash while producing customers’ files. Every 20 minutes of re-booting counts.”

By far the bigger challenge was migrating the thousand franchise locations, who frequently must run legacy customer files generated from multiple applications in mixed computing environments. While that effort is ongoing, nearly all of the centers have upgraded to Mac OS X, motivated by the reliability of the system and an end to extension and system conflicts.

Upgraded Results

The results of Sir Speedy’s upgrade have more than rewarded the effort. “Both for corporate and for the franchises, Mac OS X has been incredibly stable,” says Kozlov.

Inside corporate headquarters, the new reliability translates to lower costs and less maintenance, freeing Kozlov to spend more quality time with franchisees. “ New hires at corporate who come in from a PC world just latch onto it and say ‘I can learn this, it’s easy.’ From the IT perspective, we have been virus-free for as long as I can remember.”

In the franchises, the upgrade has produced more reliable printing, with easier printer setups, fewer crashes and improved integration between applications. “Moving to Mac OS X means they don’t crash while producing customers’ files,” says Koslov. “Every 20 minutes of re-booting counts.”

Especially useful for the franchises is the ability of Mac OS X to communicate with any printer or workstation, regardless of the operating system, without third-party networking software. “In the past our franchisees had to pay a network consultant to connect their output devices.” says Koslov. “But not today. That’s huge.”

Designer Friendly

For the franchise designers, graphic artists and production editors who wrangle customer files for printing, Mac OS X has delivered substantial benefits. And to the issue of font matching, their most frustrating technical challenge, the OS brings specific relief.

“One problem not addressed by any font management application is the ability to use PC fonts.” says Koslov. “But Mac OS X comes to the rescue. Because Mac OS X accepts every font format without conversion, including PC fonts, we do not have to waste time searching for a Mac compatible version of that obscure TrueType PC font.”

We love that the PDF technology is built in. If we’re going to certain presses, we get much better output from the Mac. So for a Publisher file, we’ll PDF it out and open it to the Mac because we have better control on the Mac than on the PC.”

Matt Diehl, production manager for Sir Speedy, Orlando, has seen Mac OS X benefits throughout his design and production workflow: “We love that the PDF technology is built in. If we’re going to certain presses, we get much better output from the Mac. So for a Publisher file, we’ll PDF it out and open it to the Mac because we have better control on the Mac than on the PC.”

Stability equals productivity.
Our Macs rarely crash using Mac
OS X, so our productivity is high.”

From Inline to Online

Although customer demand for traditional printing remains strong, Sir Speedy continues to adjust to a market that increasingly works through the web. Beginning this year, some franchises began offering their customers a complete suite of online business document management services that lets their clients create, edit and reproduce documents on demand, 24/7, from any browser.

“The internet has made a huge impact in our business, and in some cases, even increased the consumption of traditional ink on paper printing,” says Kozlov. “Online ordering is huge. Some of our franchisees are reporting that the majority of their customers are submitting their jobs via the Internet.”

As with their more traditional services, the new online services are finding useful leverage in features of Mac OS X, including ColorSync and built-in PDF capabilities. “Our website has a proofing section where a franchisee can upload a PDF proof with an embedded color profile for the customer so when the customer sees that proof on his monitor it actually represents what will come off the press,” he says.

In the Queue

While completing the rollout of Mac OS X into the franchises, Kozlov is eagerly anticipating Tiger. “I saw the keynote address at the WWDC, and if you tell me that Tiger’s going to make my life that much easier and help our users locate their documents that much faster, I want it now.”

But absent Tiger, Koslov is satisfied that Sir Speedy is pushing pixels to paper with unprecedented efficiency. “With Mac OS X we’re always productive, and in our environment, production is everything.”

Kozlov’s Top 5 Reasons to Upgrade to Mac OS X



TOPICS: Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: apple; business; macintosh; macpinglist; macuser

1 posted on 12/10/2004 9:04:47 PM PST by Swordmaker
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To: Bush2000; antiRepublicrat; LasVegasMac; Action-America; eno_; N3WBI3; zeugma; TechJunkYard; ...

Good Mac OSX productivity article PING!

If you want to be on the Mac List, or for some strange reason, off the Mac List, Freepmail me.


2 posted on 12/10/2004 9:06:18 PM PST by Swordmaker (Tagline now open, please ring bell.)
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To: 1L

1L, you might be interested in this article on the ease of Macs in business because of their ability to handle any file...


3 posted on 12/10/2004 9:11:36 PM PST by Swordmaker (Tagline now open, please ring bell.)
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To: Swordmaker
"'Nearly everyone in Sir Speedy Corporate uses Macs, which means I can spend less time training new corporate employees and more time in the field helping franchisees.'"

This defies logic. OS X isn't the dominant operating system. In order to use it properly, it would indeed require more training time than a similar XP system.

And no, I'm not a Mac hater.
4 posted on 12/10/2004 9:14:47 PM PST by Terpfen (Gore/Sharpton '08: it's Al-right!)
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To: Swordmaker

With IBM selling off their laptop business, my next laptop may very well be a Powerbook. It depends on what software I'm using then, and who else is in the market, and I will have to extensively research Apple's support. I have my doubts (I really don't like what I read on Apple's forums in some cases), but I know enough about Dell, for example, that I would look for alternatives. I don't think I'd ever buy a Compaq/HP laptop.

Desktop? Since I'd likely go linux before OSX, I don't have any plans of ever going Mac, for the reasons discussed before. But things do change and I evaluate what's best for me. Right now, my current setup is far and away the best for me, and it really isn't even close. Your needs may be different.


5 posted on 12/10/2004 9:24:04 PM PST by 1L
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To: Swordmaker

"...a franchisee can upload a PDF proof with an embedded color profile for the customer so when the customer sees that proof on his monitor it actually represents what will come off the press."

Sorry, but an old quip in the printing biz is a tombstone with the words "He Trusted The Screen". Color professionals don't trust the screen, they use Pantone, etc.


6 posted on 12/10/2004 9:28:22 PM PST by avenir
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To: Swordmaker

The only reason I'd consider going for a Mac is for the look. But given that a Mac would cost three times the amount of my current PC (which is no fossil), it's hard to justify. I'd probably just blow the $1000 difference on a ATI Radeon and a custom case + accessories. Mac's security advantage? Not really my concern since I use a combo of Linux and a properly secured Windows. If Apple ever becomes more competitive in terms of pricing though...


7 posted on 12/10/2004 9:34:02 PM PST by Ex-Dem (AFL-CIO - Where organized labor becomes organized crime.)
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To: avenir
Sorry, but an old quip in the printing biz is a tombstone with the words "He Trusted The Screen". Color professionals don't trust the screen, they use Pantone, etc.

The Mac's monitors can be Pantone certified... but in the context of the comment about the customer seeing a representation on his screen of what the final output will be is wrong. Just go down to any computer store and look at the differing color presentations on the display monitors.

8 posted on 12/10/2004 9:52:05 PM PST by Swordmaker (Tagline now open, please ring bell.)
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To: Ex-Dem
But given that a Mac would cost three times the amount of my current PC (which is no fossil), it's hard to justify.

Lessee... Apple 17" iMac = $1300 divided by 3 means your system cost you $433.

Does that include a 17" Widescreen (16x9 aspect ratio) LCD monitor?

Did you buy a copy of WindowsXP or did you use one you already had?

What suite of software do you include with your $400 wonder?

Does it include a waranty?

Did you build it yourself?

9 posted on 12/10/2004 10:03:22 PM PST by Swordmaker (Tagline now open, please ring bell.)
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To: Swordmaker

No, I didn't build it myself. It's a Dell, came with it's own licensed version of XP, warranty, etc. Bought three of them simultaneously actually (cluster). It came with a decent sized flatpanel monitor. I'm not sure what size it is though. As for software, I use what I can get for free, i.e. Open Office, plus I have various legally licensed software available.


10 posted on 12/10/2004 10:14:24 PM PST by Ex-Dem (AFL-CIO - Where organized labor becomes organized crime.)
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To: Ex-Dem
The only reason I'd consider going for a Mac is for the look. But given that a Mac would cost three times the amount of my current PC

As a person with 5 Macs I can commiserate with you about the price. That is why, even though I love my Mac, that I never try to "sell" it to other people. But, when I have taken my Mac to work, the young 30-something males think it's great ... they love the display, bells and whistles. But they always shy away from the price, alas.

11 posted on 12/10/2004 10:24:40 PM PST by BunnySlippers (George W. Bush is our president ... Get over it!)
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To: Ex-Dem
It's a Dell, came with it's own licensed version of XP, warranty, etc.

Sounds like a good system. I just went to Dell and took their basic Dimension 3000 and built a system that got as close to the iMac as possible (some things are not duplicatable) and came to $740 without shipping costs.

12 posted on 12/10/2004 10:28:36 PM PST by Swordmaker (Tagline now open, please ring bell.)
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To: Swordmaker

Lol, one of the major things being unduplicatable is the lack of various power cables/peripheral cords/ethernet springing out the back like spaghetti. It's pushed into a corner, so the cords are a little less noticeable. Maybe one day I'll buy it a nice looking silver case to replace the generic Dell gray/black one, plus a few case lights. Unless in the meantime the price of a Mac drops by a few hundred bucks...
(Yes, I know I'm a total cheapskate :P)


13 posted on 12/10/2004 10:43:51 PM PST by Ex-Dem (AFL-CIO - Where organized labor becomes organized crime.)
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To: BunnySlippers

You pretty much summed it up right there. I know at least three Powerbook owners. The first time I saw that silver/white case with the plastic logo in the center, it was like "Damn! I want one!". Soon as I found out the price though, it was like "Ehhh?! It costs how much?!". I have to confess though, I did go through a phase when I made my Linux KDE desktop a OSX Aqua clone.


14 posted on 12/10/2004 10:54:52 PM PST by Ex-Dem (AFL-CIO - Where organized labor becomes organized crime.)
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To: Swordmaker

Are you aware that FR's posting policy prohibits posting advertising? This is pure marketing drivel from Apple.com. Stop posting this crap.


15 posted on 12/11/2004 1:50:17 AM PST by Bush2000
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To: BunnySlippers

I quite agree. The Macs are more expensive for more capability. The chimera of "more software" and "cheaper hardware" will suck folks into the straitjacketed MS-world. OTOH, being a po' boy, and coming from the Apple II, I went with the Mac, and have bought exactly two of them in ten years (hmm, nine years I guess). If I had more cash, I'd still go with the Mac, but would get a bleeding edge model. :') My Rev B iMac (running nearly continuously since early '99) had an episode of flakiness this week, which I believe is due to the hard drive going screwy. I'll probably just swap out the drive and do a RAM upgrade at the same time. Or maybe grab a Sonnet accelerator for the PM 7600 (that has an 18 gb SCSI now).


16 posted on 12/11/2004 1:50:17 PM PST by SunkenCiv ("All I have seen teaches me trust the Creator for all I have not seen." -- Emerson)
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To: Swordmaker

Thanks for the post and the ping, and by all means, keep it up. No one has a gun to anyone's head to waste their own bandwidth visiting the Mac topics.


17 posted on 12/11/2004 1:52:32 PM PST by SunkenCiv ("All I have seen teaches me trust the Creator for all I have not seen." -- Emerson)
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To: Swordmaker

The I'm a god bump because I'm the only guy on the planet that can make Windows work bump.

Or if you believe "journalists" it seems that I'm the only guy.

You can get my autograph for a nominal fee.


18 posted on 12/11/2004 10:41:10 PM PST by Joe_October (Saddam supported Terrorists. Al Qaeda are Terrorists. I can't find the link.)
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