- Start Monitoring Usage – It’s common knowledge in the printer service business that office print volumes drop by 10% if people believe their usage is being monitored. Studies also show that roughly 20% of what gets printed never gets used. With new monitoring software, you can see who’s printing what, and at what device. We call it “Print Monitoring Software” and it’s easy to add to any networked device.
- Use Color Wisely – A letter size color document with only 5% toner coverage costs 4 times the cost of a black and white version. So why do we use so much color? Because it looks great and nobody is checking to see if color is necessary or not. People printing emails with color signatures and web pages are the two biggest culprits. You can put a dent in color use right away by setting all printer defaults to black and white. Then people must select color only if they want it.
- Print Less, Digitize More – The paperless office has arrived, but people don’t realize it yet. Paper intensive processes can now be converted into digital documents and digital workflows at the touch of a button. Even the “paper lovers” in your office can be up and running in minutes. We’re not saying the paper is going away just yet, but new scanning and sharing technology makes it easier, less expensive and more secure than printing a paper document.
- Leverage Proactive Toner Ordering – Have you ever noticed that the toner flashing light seems to only appear when you need your printer the most? We’ve all run out of toner, dashed to the local toner provider and dashed back to the office. Now, most offices have taken a proactive approach with printer monitoring software that advises you or your toner provider when there is roughly 20% toner remaining, so you can reorder and have a replacement on-site to avoid running out. This also prevents overstocking toner cartridges in the supply cabinet – which usually happens just after someone runs out!
- Create an Office Print Policy – Your employees probably have a common understanding of what’s appropriate regarding personal long-distance phone calls from work, who has access to the mailing machine or how much postage they can use – correct? These “office policy” examples may differ from an office print policy but they all share the same goal. To establish a common understanding among all employees about what is acceptable and what’s not. An office print policy is a simple set of rules that helps companies and their employees print smarter and print for less.
Read more at : https://allied.tech/top-5-office-printing-tips/