Océ

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Océ NV is a Netherlands-based company that manufactures and sells production printing and copying hardware and related software. Océ N.V. has been a listed company since 1958 and is the holding company for the international Océ Group. This group has operating companies in 25 industrialised countries. The Group has around 24,000 employees globally and gross income of over $3.5 billion per year. Over a third of its income comes from the North American market. The Océ headquarters is located in Venlo, the Netherlands.

Océ specializes in durable, high-end equipment, suitable for corporate publishing/reproduction centers as well as commercial printing and copying operations. Most of its equipment is high-speed (50 pages per minute and over) and has very high duty cycles (half a million pages a month and higher). It is also a leader in high-end color inkjet printing used for signage.

The company has research and development and production facilities in the Netherlands, Canada, Belgium, Germany, France, Japan, the Czech Republic, Romania and the United States.[1]

Contents

[edit] History of the company (1877-Present)

Océ arrived at its current business indirectly. It started in 1877 as a family business in manufacturing machines for coloring butter and margarine. The company’s founder, a chemist named Lodewijk van der Grinten, supplied this colouring to farmers and then this was supplied to the first margerine factories. They continued to manufacture buttering colour until 1970.].[2]

In 1919, the grandson of Lodewijk, Louis van der Grinten, became interested in the blueprint process used for producing wide-format technical drawings, used in construction, manufacturing, etc. At that time, blueprint paper was extremely light-sensitive, and therefore had a very short shelf life before being used. Louis invented a coating that made blueprint paper last longer, for up to a year. This is considered the company’s first step into providing document solutions.[3]

In the 1920s, the company developed methods of copying originals using a dry diazo process. This process was to replace the blueprint process in the industry almost entirely by 1940. With this new process developed by Louis Van der Grinten, he treated the paper surface with chemicals which exposed the paper in the developing machine without having to add any further fluid.[4]

The company was renamed in 1927 as Océ, based on the German initials O.C. for "Ohne Componente" (without component).

In 1967, the company entered the office printing market with an electro-photographic process for copying documents using special, chemically-treated paper. It also started up a factory to build its own equipment.

In 1973, the company sold its first plain-paper office copier. The new process they developed printed paper with an unusually short paper path, with mono-component toner, and transferred the image with ‘copy press’. Soon after, the company also developed an application for wide-format printing.[5]

Since that time it has developed a wide range of patented technologies in printing, copying, and scanning. It has also developed advanced workflow products for help in preparing documents for printing.

In the mid-1970s, with the acquisition of the UK company, Ozalid, a company almost the size of Océ, Océ became the world leader in printing products for the engineering market.[6]

In the late 1980s, with the acquisition of the plotter division from the French company, Schlumberger, important developments in colour printing, both for wide and narrow format, occurred for Océ.[7]

In 1995, the company entered the very high speed, high volume printing market when it acquired Siemens’ High Performance Printing Division. This division manufactures printers capable of producing over 1000 prints a minute. The applications are documents like telephone bills and bank statements. Also at this time, the Océ company started to bring digital printers/copiers to market.[8]

In 2006, Océ received the ON DEMAND Best of Show Award for recognition of their design innovation with the VarioPrint 6250 digital duplex cut-sheet printer. The award recognized the printer as the world's fastest and most productive.[9]

[edit] Acquisitions

Over the last few decades, Océ has made numerous acquisitions.

  • In 1978, it bought UK-based Ozalid Group Holdings Ltd., developer of the Ozalid process of reproduction, and Océ’s the biggest rival in the diazo printing market.
  • In 1989, it bought the plotter business of French company Schlumberger.
  • In 1995, it bought the printer manufacturing division of German computer company Siemens-Nixdorf.[10]
  • In 2001, it acquired the Professional Imaging Division of Swiss-based Gretag Imaging Group, Inc., a maker of large-format display printing equipment.
  • In 2005, it bought U.S.-based Imagistics International, Inc., a reseller of office copiers and multifunctionals.[11]
  • In 2006, it bought U.S.-based CaseData, a leading provider of electronic discovery and litigation support services to U.S. law firms and corporations. [12]

[edit] Reference list

  1. ^ Lexdon Business Library. ‘Océ Business Services to Acquire CaseData Inc., E-Discovery and Litigation Support Pioneer’, 6 October 2006. Retrieved on 18 March 2007.[1]
  2. ^ Guide to Océ Museum, 2004.
  3. ^ Ibid.
  4. ^ Ibid.
  5. ^ Ibid.
  6. ^ Ibid.
  7. ^ Ibid.
  8. ^ Ibid.
  9. ^ Printondemand.com, The Digital Printers' Resource. 'Océ wins 2006 ON DEMAND Best of Show Award', 21 May 2006. Retrieved 22 March 2007. [2]
  10. ^ Guide to Océ Museum, 2004.
  11. ^ The Investors Advisor (‘De Beleggers Adviseur’ in Dutch). ‘Océ announces actions to capitalize on the opportunities provided by the Imagistics’, 1 December 2005.Retrieved on 18 March 2007.[3]
  12. ^ Lexdon Business Library. ‘Océ Business Services to Acquire CaseData Inc., E-Discovery and Litigation Support Pioneer’, 6 October 2006. Retrieved on 18 March 2007.[4]

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