27 October 2004

Getronics’ Service Endorsed by Portman for over €½ million

London – October 27, 2004 - Getronics, one of the UK’s leading ICT solutions and services providers, has secured a further three-year contract with the Portman Building Society, to provide branch support and maintenance for desktop PCs, printers and infrastructure at its 800 seats in all 114 Portman branches.

“We have a strong network of branches,” explains Phil McCabe, CIO, Portman Building Society. “We differentiate ourselves on customer service in these branches and the IT that supports it is therefore crucial. We have worked with Getronics for over a number of years and remain impressed with the support and services that the partnership provides.”

A strong cultural fit between the two organisations helped cement the contract, which includes a powerful service level agreement to ensure Portman’s customer service is never interrupted. Getronics hopes its performance with the Portman will help generate opportunities in the future to support the IT infrastructure of The Staffordshire, a trading name of the Portman, which operates in the West Midlands.

Roger Whitehead, managing director, Getronics UK and Ireland comments: “Organisations in the retail banking sector operate in a fiercely competitive market and need to be assured that they can offer their customers the best service possible for every minute that their branches are open. The service level agreement and support we have offered the Portman will continue to enable them to concentrate on their core business without having to worry about issues around their IT.”

Ends/

About Getronics UK & Ireland:
Getronics is one of the UK's leading Information and Communication Technology (ICT) companies, specialising in the financial services and telecommunications markets. With over 1,200 highly skilled employees, Getronics UK is one of the largest of the 30 Getronics subsidiaries worldwide. Through consulting, integrating, implementing and managing infrastructure and business solutions, the company helps many of the world's largest global and local organisations to maximise the value of their technology investment and improve interaction with their customers.

For further information about Getronics UK and Ireland, please visit www.getronics.co.uk

About Portman Building Society:
Portman Building Society has been established for over 150 years tracing its roots back to 1846, making it the third oldest building society in the UK. It is the 4th largest UK building society with assets of over £15.1 billion and employs over 2,000 staff. With some 150 (Portman and The Staffordshire) branches based predominantly in the south of England, the Society serves over 1.8 million members. For further information visit your local branch of the Portman or call 0845 60 90 600. Details are also available at www.portman.co.uk

The Staffordshire is a trading name of Portman Building Society. The brand was created as a result of the merger between Portman Building Society and Staffordshire Building Society, which completed on 31 December 2003. The Staffordshire has 39 branches in the West Midlands and its administrative centre is in Wolverhampton.

For further information contact...

21 October 2004

SUN MICROSYSTEMS AWARDS XEROX MULTI MILLION EURO SERVICES PROJECT

Xerox management of Sun’s European print, copy, fax, and multi-function product fleet, delivers ten per cent cost saving in initial stages

Uxbridge, UK and Ballycoolin, Ireland – 21st October 2004 – Xerox today announces it has been awarded a five year, multi million euro international outsourcing services project, by Sun Microsystems. The project will see Xerox assume total responsibility for the management, maintenance, and streamlining of Sun’s entire fleet of printing, copying, faxing and multi-functional products used by the company’s 11,500 total workforce across 119 sites in 31 European countries as well as South Africa. Sun is using Xerox Office Services to reduce printing costs, improve financial administration and service levels as well as boosting its bottom line right across Europe.

Xerox completed an audit of all devices in Sun’s offices, and proposed a rationalisation plan for how to reduce the quantity of those devices and re-deploy them to ensure Sun maximises utility from each individual device. At the same time, Xerox has also taken on the management of Sun’s different European device manufacturers, consumables suppliers and maintenance contracts, as well as assuming sole responsibility for resolving device queries from all Sun employees through its Xerox Global Services support centre in Ballycoolin, Ireland.

“In effect, the initial benefits we’ve seen already are two-fold,” explains Larry Matarazzi, director, Workplace Resources, Sun Microsystems. “Where financial administration is concerned, we’ve gone from having to process over 3,000 invoices per quarter across Europe from all 27 device, consumables and maintenance suppliers, to just one invoice per country per month from Xerox. Secondly, our employees have reported a dramatic improvement in customer service when it comes to device problem resolution across Europe. We set Xerox a target of resolving 80 per cent of issues immediately, but Xerox is actually resolving close to 99.8 per cent, and Sun has already cut its ongoing European print and document management costs by around ten per cent.”

The next step of the project, which has already begun, is the rationalisation of Sun’s device fleet by Xerox. Xerox will continue to deal with every employee query regarding devices – from how to find a printer driver to how to deal with the IT aspects of moving a Sun office to a new site – but simultaneously work to reduce the number of devices that Sun has. In turn, this will reduce the financial burden of the legacy fleet at Sun. In this phase, Xerox has committed to reduce Sun’s print and document management costs in Europe by 25 per cent.

“We have already received dramatic ‘human’ benefits from Xerox’s work in the form of improved morale and better staff productivity,” continues Matarazzi. “In fact, it’s fair to say we started to see the benefit from day one. For the first time we know exactly how many devices we have in these countries. We’re now looking forward to the financial cost savings that will come from having a device fleet and management set-up that will better suit the needs of our European personnel.” Sun is able to make cost savings through using Xerox’s negotiation and buying power for equipment maintenance and other print consumables, as well as increasing productivity and reducing downtime caused by device failure.

“The first part of the project has gone very well from both companies’ points of view,” says Shaun Pantling, director and general manager, Xerox Global Services, Xerox Europe. “As we continue the rationalisation, we will significantly improve Sun’s asset utilisation by increasing the number of users per device from seven to 17 whilst enhancing functionality to increase productivity.”

-ENDS-

NOTES TO EDITORS

About Xerox Europe
Xerox Europe, the European operations of Xerox Corporation, markets a comprehensive range of Xerox products, solutions and services, as well as associated supplies and software. Its offerings are focused on three main areas: offices from small to large, production print and graphic arts environments, and services that include consulting, systems design and management, and document outsourcing.

Xerox Europe also has manufacturing and logistics operations in Ireland, the UK and Holland and a research and development facility (Xerox Research Centre Europe) in Grenoble, France. For more information, visit www.xerox.com.

Xerox®, The Document Company® and the digital X® are trademarks of Xerox Corporation. All non-Xerox brands and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.

About Xerox Global Services
Xerox Global Services, one of the three main business units of Xerox, offers a broad portfolio of services including consulting and systems integration, imaging, content management and outsourcing. We work with our clients to improve and manage their document intensive business processes - everyday processes like customer communications, billing, training, or records management.

Xerox®, The Document Company® and the digital X® are trademarks of Xerox Corporation. All non-Xerox brands and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies.

About Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The Computer" -- has propelled Sun Microsystems, Inc. (Nasdaq: SUNW) to its position as a leading provider of industrial-strength hardware, software and services that make the Net work. Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and on the World Wide Web at http://sun.com

Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun Logo, Solaris, N1 and The Network Is The Computer are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. All SPARC trademarks are used under license and are trademarks or registered trademarks of SPARC International, Inc. in the United States and other countries. Products bearing SPARC trademarks are based upon an architecture developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc. UNIX is a registered trademark in the United States and other countries, exclusively licensed through X/Open Company, Ltd.

19 October 2004

Xerox Global Services Makes Sun Shine Brighter

Case study written for Xerox Global Services Europe, October 2004.

When leading IT manufacturer Sun Microsystems wanted to find additional ways to streamline the costs of its document production and management processes, Xerox Global Services rose to the challenge.

Sun Microsystems is renowned globally as a market leader in IT hardware, software, and services. In Europe and South Africa the company operates 119 sites in 31 countries, employing 11,500 people, and had a global revenue of US$11.185 billion in the last fiscal year. Larry Matarazzi, director for Workplace Resources EMEA, Sun Microsystems explains, “Over the last few years Sun has been affected by the global down-turn in the IT sector, with 9/11 and the bursting of the dotcom bubble affecting the technology sector as a whole. Even though there was little ‘new business’ activity at that time, Xerox Global Services approached us proactively with an innovative solution at a time when we needed it most and were already looking to cut costs aggressively. It doesn’t get much better than that.”

Documents represent a huge hidden cost to organisations but they are the lifeblood of business operations, coursing through every PC across every department and across every output device. But research carried out by Xerox Global Services and analyst group IDC indicates that a staggering 90 per cent of European companies cannot even estimate the cost of document processing to their organisation. Xerox Global Services estimates that this figure rests between 5-15 per cent of a company’s annual revenue.

Due to Sun’s understanding of technology, the processes it had in place to deal with managing documents was more advanced than many companies, according to Bernie Gooch, service development manager, Xerox Europe.

“When we first visited Sun and carried out an audit of its document processes, we found that there were seven users per device, which is a lot better than average, but we still found that up to 25 per cent savings could be made,” Gooch explained.

An excess of document processing equipment, such as disparate stand-alone printers, copiers, fax machines and scanners, presents significant maintenance costs and unwanted time burdens on the IT department. These disparate devices can typically be replaced with multifunction devices placed strategically about the office premises. In September 2003, a project commenced to reduce Sun’s total document spend, starting with six key sites across Europe in Camberley, Munich, Dublin, Amersfoort, Berlin and Toulouse. The project was implemented by Xerox Office Services, one of three lines of business within Xerox Global Services.

Across these sites, Xerox Global Services found the following inventory when carrying out its due diligence assessment:

Total Devices 1,744
Suppliers 19
Models 174
Annual Impressions 63.77m

Following its audit, Xerox Global Services proposed a rationalisation plan to reduce the quantity of those devices and reapportion them across the offices to ensure Sun gets the best from each individual device. Xerox Global Services is bound by a service level agreement (SLA) to provide 25 per cent savings on Sun’s print-related costs.

The hidden costs of managing all these devices included warranties and printer disposals, time and material repairs, recycling and unserviceable devices. A lot of devices and consumables were not covered by a service agreement, which presented multiple problems. A solution was needed, as Matarazzi explained.

“We had to decide who would take ownership of the budget as the project fell between IT and facilities management,” he said. Xerox Global Services pitched the project not only to Sun’s IT management and facilities management, but also to Sun’s senior management, and then managed the entire programme from its Ballycoolin site outside Dublin.

The process was guided by Xerox Global Services’ “Lean Six Sigma” techniques for resolving problems. Six Sigma involves five steps to successful project implementation including design of solution, measurement of existing processes, analysis of problem creation, implementation of new solutions and a 12-month period of ‘control’ to assess results.

At the same time, Xerox Global Services has also assumed responsibility for liaising with 27 different European device manufacturers, consumables suppliers, and maintenance contractors whose equipment is still in use at Sun, with the sole responsibility for resolving device queries from all the company’s employees through its Xerox Global Services support centre in Ballycoolin.

The multi million Euro project is already yielding benefits, according to Matarazzi. “In effect, the initial benefits we’ve seen already are two-fold,” he commented. “Where sheer financial administration is concerned, we have gone from having to process over 3,000 invoices per quarter across Europe for all our document or device-related suppliers, to just one invoice per country per month from Xerox Global Services.”

Matarazzi added that Sun’s employees have reported a dramatic impact on customer service when it comes to device problem resolution across Europe. “We set Xerox Global Services a target of resolving 80 per cent of issues immediately, but Xerox Global Services is actually resolving close to 99.8 per cent, and Sun has already cut its ongoing European print costs by around ten per cent,” he said.

Sun has also seen major ‘human’ benefits, such as improved morale and better staff productivity, Matarazzi added. “We are also receiving regular management reports and, again for the first time, are aware exactly how much we are spending on printing documents and maintaining these devices,” he continued. “We’re now looking forward to the financial cost savings that will come from having an optimised fleet and document processes that will better suit the needs of our personnel.”

Xerox Global Services’ aim was to bring the number of users per device up to 17, representing a significant reduction in inventory and releasing office space. As part of the project Xerox Global Services employees are dedicated to assisting Sun, including on site visits to help resolve problems, provide productivity and document consultancy as well as make recommendations. This is in addition to the Xerox Global Services personnel providing technical support at Ballycoolin.

Due to the success – and the gains achieved in the initial stages - of the European project, Sun is now considering using Xerox Global Services to manage its document services globally. Matarazzi concludes: “One of the key reasons why we picked Xerox Global Services for the job in the first place was because it was the only company we felt could deliver in every country we operate in. We’ve had colleagues from the Asia Pacific region on the project team since day one, they are now very interested in using Xerox Global Services in their region too.

07 October 2004

Xerox Research Centre Europe (XRCE): Media Backgrounder (Image Processing Research Area)

Xerox Research Centre Europe (XRCE) is structured into four complementary research areas: content analysis; document structure; image processing; and work practice technology.

At XRCE, the image processing research area specialises in images captured by digital cameras, and continually builds on developments made in capturing images in hostile environments. ‘Hostile’ refers to an environment where poor lighting, shadows, skewed documents, smudges, or any other factor may reduce image quality. In short, this technology makes it possible for a standard digital camera to provide similar results to a dedicated, office-based desktop scanner.

The software is so advanced that it can capture a snapshot of a document taken with glare, reflections and other detrimental factors, but still provide a high quality, optical character recognition (OCR)-enabled document automatically. Technically, this work has produced new methods giving state-of-the-art performance for correcting lighting variations and perspective distortions, for reconstructing and normalising colour camera images, for automatic zoom control, as well as camera optimisations of techniques for text and embedded data decoding.

The technology has been designed to be compatible with shop-standard digital cameras, or even mobile telephones with camera facilities. As such, it has the capability to turn a standard, competitively priced mobile phone into a portable image scanner. Software held on a PC or network enables an image to be downloaded so that all Xerox’s other technologies can be applied e.g. categorisation, classification and storage.

The next step for this avenue of research is enabling the technology to recognise objects as well as text. Recognising objects can enable many associated services for the user. For example, this technology could allow a car rental firm to record and store images of bumps or dents in car bodywork, and identify similar cases when a new one arises. The technology could even be applied to the recording and categorisation of anything animal, vegetable, or mineral, for fast reference and retrieval in the field of science or conservation.

The image processing research at XRCE generates technologies with practical business applications to solve genuine business issues. Individual technologies that have been guided by XRCE from R&D concept to commercialisation - either through a Xerox business group or via a third-party organisation - are:

• Technology: PageCam
• Technology: Portable Document Camera

Separate, individual fact sheets are available on all of these technologies and the business issues they solve (see below).

For more information, please refer to www.xrce.xerox.com or contact...

04 October 2004

Xerox Global Services: Media Backgrounder (Document Outsourcing Line of Business)

Xerox Global Services is split into three lines of business: Xerox Office Services (XOS); Business Process Services (BPS) and Document Outsourcing. Document Outsourcing comprises seven services: Creative Services; Document Advisor Office; eprintsourcing; Document Production and Publishing; Transactional Document Production; Mailroom Services; and Customer Communication Services.

Documents cost a lot of money: Every organisation in the current climate is trying to increase revenues whilst reducing costs and enhancing productivity. There is one area of spend which is not under control and is not measured. It is Xerox’s experience, endorsed by consultants, that document costs are significant and, more importantly, often not measured in an organisation. Document costs are between 5-15 per cent of an organisation’s revenue with 17-25 per cent of that cost directly related to document output.

Many organisations do not know the cost of documents in their organisations: This means, therefore, that they cannot even begin to reduce and control their document cost. Whilst each service offer delivers its own unique value, the delivery of significant cost savings is common to all offers.

1/7 Creative Services
Xerox provides a whole range of creative services including presentation services; desktop publishing; multimedia; internet and intranet; localisation; and translation. Using expert creative talent, the latest technology, and proven business processes, this service addresses two key issues that face anyone with responsibility for document creation: control and brand integrity. Xerox is able to significantly reduce and control costs associated with creative activity by streamlining processes, optimising work schedules and carrying out activities that normally attract high agency mark-ups as well as through the use of leading-edge technology.

Brand assets (such as collaterals and presentations) are dispersed amongst agencies, designers, printers, employees; all may hold assets locally that, at best, are hard to find and, at worst, are lost as relationships change. Xerox Global Services uses its expertise and digital asset management software to control and catalogue customers’ brand assets centrally. The assets are made available via the web to the customer’s employees, and externally to any agencies, designers, or printers the customer uses. This ensures all the necessary publics are using the most up-to-date and, crucially, the same branding.
Brand integrity ensures that customers are able to communicate consistent, undiluted branding in every market they operate in. The integrity of the brand is protected and costs are therefore reduced through re-use.

2/7 Document Advisor Office (DAO)
DAO saves Xerox Global Services customers thousands of Euros in hidden document costs, and in the case of Lloyds TSB in the UK, saves the bank £3.8 million in costs every year on an annual spend of £28 million. In short, DAO is a service that expedites an organisation’s use, management, and storage of documents.

DAO works by establishing a single point of reference for all documents in an organisation. Part of the reason why so many organisations are unaware of the cost of documents is because of the sheer quantity and variety generated. An example DAO customer organisation might have three facilities, namely an office, a factory, and a warehouse, and each of these three facilities will generate and use documents necessary for its own objectives.

Typically the office might house the finance department, creating invoices and statements, a marketing department that produces collaterals, point of sale materials and direct mail, and a human resources department that uses or produces application forms or training and policy manuals. Meanwhile, the most often used documents in the factory might be production schedules and pick lists, and in the warehouse, documents aiding inventory management are likely to be the most common. In addition, the warehouse is likely to be used to store stocks of hard copy documents for the other two sites. Xerox classifies all these different documents according to their type and spend: commercial print; warehousing and distribution; central reprographics; print on demand; transaction printing; forms; and office output.

Likely document issues will be overstocks of certain documents that require storage and all the costs that come with it, multiple document users or owners, and a myriad of different suppliers associated with the production of every different document.

DAO counters the issues by offering customers control in the form of a sole point of contact for all documents, and all supplier liaison. It ensures consistency in the organisation’s documents, ensures that branding guidelines are maintained in every extremity of the organisation, and gives the customer information on document spend regularly or on request to enable close monitoring and management. DAO also offers better cost efficiency than the organisation can itself, and allows customer personnel to concentrate on their core business.

Finally, DAO helps the organisation in the long run by reducing the time-to-market of critical business documents, boosting brand image, and reducing the need for document storage facilities by facilitating print on demand.

3/7 eprintsourcing (XEPS)
XEPS tackles the issues caused when an organisation outsources work to multiple external print companies, but without any method of organisation-wide control or management. Research through its existing European customer base has proved that organisations can spend at least 5 per cent of turnover on external print jobs. This includes not only the cost of the physical printing itself, but also the personnel time and administration involved in finding the right supplier, of finding the cheapest supplier, and managing them through the job.

An organisation reaps a number of benefits when it uses XEPS. For the individual managing the job, XEPS will automatically:

• shortlist relevant suppliers according to the extent to which they match the brief, and the budget;
• provide an online method of managing the supplier and the job itself;
• facilitate the invoicing and payment process for that job.

For the organisation as a whole, XEPS ensures that:

• printing is consolidated across the business with only the most cost-effective, reliable, high-quality suppliers;
• organisational printing costs can be monitored and managed as a whole;
• the latest technologies are used automatically to expedite cost-effective printing wherever possible.

Overall, XEPS keeps personnel connected online to suppliers and Xerox printing experts at all times, and those same trained and experienced experts can be brought into the customer organisation to oversee and advise on particular jobs. It is flexible enough to be used for anything from complex direct mail or marketing and point of sale collateral, to company stationery such as compliments slips and business cards.

4/7 Document Production and Publishing (DPPS)
The basic task of print production and publishing, finishing, fulfilment and distribution of internal or customer-facing documents can prove costly, time-consuming, or both. In some cases, organisations may not even have the expertise in-house and therefore need to outsource anyway. Xerox Global Services’ DPPS solution caters to this need.

DPPS can expedite the processing of internal documents, external documents, or both. For internal documents such as memos, presentations, or reports, DPPS becomes an in-house print room. Requests for any internal documents are fulfilled by the print room for anyone within the organisation. For external documents e.g. a mobile phone manual for a phone manufacturer, DPPS can still produce the documents faster and more cost effectively than the organisation can itself; producing the right document in the right place at the right time. DPPS allows the organisation to concentrate on its core competencies without having to staff or manage a peripheral function such as printing. In addition, the customer organisation has the opportunity to access Xerox Global Services’ expertise in document printing and publishing, saving more money by reducing the size of its inventory (and the accompanying physical storage space), reducing the lead time on document production, and feel reassured that corporate branding guidelines will be upheld across the business.

5/7 Transactional Document Production (TDP)
TDP’s key differentiation from other Xerox services is in the ‘transactional’ part of the description, though TDP covers not only the production of invoices, payroll, financial reports, statements, invoices, ‘accounts payable’, but also insurance policies, claims documents, utility bills, direct mail pieces and other one-to-one personalised customer communications. Via TDP, Xerox Global Services offers organisations a one-stop-shop managed service for the engineering, design, production, and presentation of any transactional document used in correspondence with customers, suppliers, or other parties. TDP is also flexible enough to accommodate template and branding changes at any time without the integrated, back-office part of the service requiring overhaul. In addition to automating transactional document processes, TDP can also be harnessed to drive e-mail dialogue with customers, create an online archive of transactional information, or interact with an organisation’s database of optional content in order to personalise communications to specific individuals.

6/7 Mailroom Services
The mailroom is one of the areas in an organisation where growing pains are felt most acutely. As an organisation grows, simple tasks such as mail outs, distribution of company reports, or even seasonal financial communications to personnel can become unwieldy. The mailroom is also an area where significant cost can be saved by the automation of administration.

When Xerox Global Services offers its mailroom service it assesses an organisation’s current and likely future demand on all mailroom facilities. Xerox mailroom services fall into three broad areas; firstly, the mailroom completes basic functions such as the delivery of incoming mail to pigeonholes or individual recipient’s desks, or the organisation of couriers to transport documents externally from the organisation. Secondly, the mailroom can deliver an electronic scan-to-mail service, where incoming hard copy communications are received, opened, and scanned into soft copy so they can be stored in a central repository or network. Individual recipients are notified when documents arrive and where on the network they can be found. Thirdly, the mailroom can perform as a production facility to the organisation. For example, the mailroom could receive documents printed by TDP (see 5/7 above), or with an organisation’s customer relationship management system, and deal with the mail-out of bank statements, credit card statements, or other documents in a speedy and cost effective automated process.

Regardless of the particular functionality chosen, the mailroom service is designed to be flexible and responsive, avoiding issues caused by unplanned or short notice print runs or mail outs.

7/7 Customer Communication Services (CCS)
CCS uses both the document heritage of Xerox overall and the technological developments of Xerox Global Services and Xerox Research Centre Europe to counter the issues faced by organisations attempting to correspond with customers on an individual basis. Despite the investment in customer relationship management, internet, and corporate branding, 58 per cent of business leaders believe their customer-focused documents need to be improved1. CCS is a suite of solutions that help the customer leverage the potential for personalised customer communications. The services include a thorough document and marketing assessment that takes into account the current organisation, infrastructure, and future plans, and delivers a recommendation for specific solutions that will help execute a successful customer communication strategy. In addition, a document workflow analysis can help the organisation to deliver the document more effectively to a diverse range of media, platforms and channels including printers, faxes, email, internet and mobile technology devices.

CCS can handle enormous quantities of customer data productively and turn transactional documents into powerful marketing tools, increasing response rates and lowering costs per lead. CCS reengineers the customer’s process, which Xerox can then manage using either Document Production and Publishing (DPPS) or Transactional Document Production (TDP) Services.

For further information, please contact...

1 Source: Document, People and Technology: A European Perspective 2002 MORI survey conducted on behalf of Xerox Global Services

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Toronto, Ontario, Canada
PR, internal communications and branding pro currently freelancing as a consultant, writer, DJ, and whatever else comes my way.