FESPA survey shows printers are looking to diversify

Fespa survey diversifyThe latest FESPA Economy Survey has revealed that 70% of respondents are looking to diversify their business to improve business growth. The top areas in which print service providers (PSPs) plan to develop into are interiors (17.4%), label printing (16.67%) and signage (15.53%).

Over half believe that the market has not fully recovered (52.44%) but the outlook of printers remains optimistic despite the challenging environment, with three quarters of respondents believing that the market will grow in 2012, with an average expected growth of 14.5% across the year for their business.

Reflecting on 2011 end of year sales, 20.4% of respondents said they were better than expected, a fifth said they were better than 2010, and 40% reported that they have done as expected.

The Economy Survey was commissioned by FESPA and carried out by its research partner InfoTrends on behalf of its global wide format community. As part of FESPA's Profit for Purpose reinvestment programme, the main objective of the survey is to collect valuable insight into market trends and gauge business outlook for 2012 and beyond. The information was gathered from 225 respondents who are engaged in wide format printing from across the world.

Over half of those who took part in the survey were printers (52.9%); one fifth was resellers and 10.2% manufacturers. Europe dominated the survey's geographical split with over half of respondents (57.3%) located in the region, followed by North America, Asia, Africa, South America and Middle East respectively.

According to FESPA's Economy Survey 5, a third (33.3%) of respondents said that the primary reason for investing in a new wide format printer would be to accommodate different media and/or a wider range of applications with output quality and running costs being the other top criteria. A UV-curable inkjet printer was the highest area of investment (50%), followed by latex or another durable aqueous inkjet printer (31.6%).

Some 62.7% of respondents indicated that 'green' printing, or printing using more environmentally-friendly practices has seen an increase in demand as a service, with over one fifth planning to invest in an eco-or light solvent printer. Over a third (36.9%) also cited seeing a rise in customer demand in applications requiring white ink printing, 35.6% in versioning/variable data printing and 23.1% in printing QR codes or other interactive elements.

Printers believe that there are some challenges within the area of digital signage, with 80% of respondents believing that digital displays has, is or will impact on wide format digital print applications. Of the 80%, impact on POP graphics was deemed to be greatest (23.3%), followed by billboards, backlit, and vehicle graphics respectively.

FESPA managing director Neil Felton says: "It is heartening that our 5th Economic Survey results show that PSPs have optimism in their own entrepreneurialism. It is a very positive sign that over 70% of respondents plan to diversify their business to increase their bottom line. This commercial intelligence will inevitably stand PSPs in good stead over the forthcoming year."

The full FESPA/InfoTrends Economy Survey 5 is available as a benefit to members of FESPA affiliated associations.

www.fespa.com

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Editors World

Benny’s back and this time he means business

News image

Looking back, our domestic Sign & Digital UK 2012 show proved to be an outstanding success with more than 6,264 unique visitors attending from a wide range of companies that cover the entire production spectrum from sign makers, inplant printers, corporate printers, display printers, litho printers, screen printers, and outdoor ...

Colin Gillman

Wideformat Tweets

Social Media

Follow us on Twitter

Gerry Mulvaney

  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
prev
next

Final thoughts from Benny Landa’s Drupa

News image

Drupa has just finished and as I wait in the airport lounge to fly home it’s time to share my final thoughts from what was quickly established as Benny Landa’s Drupa. Whilst there were no further announcements made at Drupa about additional partners licensing Landa Nanography, I very much doubt that Ko...

Gerry Mulvaney

Postcard from Gerry at Benny Landa’s Drupa

News image

When Benny Landa sold Indigo to HP in 2003 he went back to Israel and set up Landa Labs. Printing was the last thing on his mind when he started to research nano technology. The main focus was pharmaceutical and energy, with hair care also on the agenda. However in the co...

Gerry Mulvaney

Greetings from the Landa Nano stand at Drupa

News image

If you want to know why I am smiling it is because I am having a whale of a time here on the Landa stand at Drupa. After incurring the wrath of my wife for cancelling a holiday and postponing my retirement yet again to be part of the Benny Landa ...

Gerry Mulvaney

By the time you read this, Gerry will be gone

News image

I have been to a number of very memorable Drupa exhibitions. I was here for the first time in 1982, when at the height of the Falklands war the international printing industry congregated in Germany. I remember being cold-shouldered by the Latin Americans and Spanish as the war raged and ...

Gerry Mulvaney

Reach for the sky

News image

When electricity first started to be used commercially at the end of the nineteenth century it was very much a locally generated affair. To begin with towns would have their own generating station and companies that needed to use it also installed generators. By the turn of the twentieth century electricity ...

Gerry Mulvaney

Subscribe to Newsletter


For Email Newsletters you can trust

Latest on GDWTV

Subscribe to GDW TV

Latest Jobs from oZZle

Latest Events

View full calendar

Facebook Fan Page

Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner