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U.S. A3/A4 Printer Page Volume 2009-2013 ForecastPublished by: IDC Published: Sep. 17, 2009 - 53 Pages Table of ContentsTable of Contents IDC Opinion In This Study MethodologyMarket Segments CoveredInstalled BaseAverage Monthly Page Volume, Average Annual Page Volume, and Total Annual Page VolumeDefinitionsSituation Overview Future Outlook Forecast and AssumptionsOverall Printer MarketColor Inkjet PrintersA3 Inkjet PrintersA4 Inkjet PrintersMonochrome Laser PrintersOverviewA3 Monochrome PrintersA4 Monochrome PrintersA3/A4 Monochrome Printers by Speed SegmentColor Laser PrintersOverviewA3 Color Laser PrintersA4 Color Laser PrintersA3/A4 Color Laser Printers by Speed SegmentEssential Guidance Learn More Related ResearchSynopsisTable: U.S. A3 Printer Installed Base by Technology, 2004–2013 Table: U.S. A4 Printer Installed Base by Technology, 2004–2013 Table: U.S. A3 Printer Average Monthly Page Volume by Technology and Speed/Price Class, 2004–2013 Table: U.S. A4 Printer Average Monthly Page Volume by Technology and Speed/Price Class, 2004–2013 Table: U.S. A3 Printer Average Annual Page Volume by Technology and Speed/Price Class, 2003–2012 Table: U.S. A4 Printer Average Annual Page Volume by Technology and Speed/Price Class, 2004–2013 Table: U.S. A3 Printer Annual Page Volume by Technology and Speed/Price Class, 2004–2013 (M) Table: U.S. A4 Printer Annual Page Volume by Technology and Speed/Price Class, 2004–2013 (M) Table: Key Forecast Assumptions for the U.S. A3/A4 Printer Page Volume Market, 2009–2013 AbstractThis IDC study quantifies the U.S. A3/A4 printer page volume market in detail, analyzing issues, trends, and changes in device usage. It contains IDC's review and forecast of the U.S. printer page volume market for 2004-2013. The printer installed base, average monthly volume, average annual monthly volume, and total page volume are presented in this document. Data for 2004-2008 is actual, whereas data for 2009-2013 is projected. Key findings include:
"The substantial printer shipment declines exhibited in the fourth quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009 have led to a declining installed base which, when coupled with flat and decreasing AMPVs, will lead to declining total printer page volume. The decline in total printer page volume is due to shifts in page volume from single-function printers to multifunction printers and the economic slowdown that has reduced overall economic activity. Indicators in April and May of 2009 have shown some positive signs that the economic slowdown may be decelerating. IDC's U.S. printer page volume forecast identifies the pockets of growth that exist in the single-function market, providing vendors with a target for R&D, marketing, and sales investment to maximize return in an increasingly competitive and difficult economy." — Jake Wang, program manager, U.S. Hardcopy Device Usage Get Full Details About This Report >> |
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