Best wishes to Phil for lots of success in his new gig.
Phil was previously with Direct Dimensions, 3DMTP, Contex, Ideal Scanners & Systems, and Ideal Reprographics.
Friday, October 31, 2014
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Oh how I loved the Redskins-Cowboys game last night!
This post has nothing, at all, to do with
reprographics!
Oh how I loved the Redskins-Cowboys game last night!
Prior to watching the game, I read several
articles about how badly the Cowboys were going to beat up the Redskins and
about how the Redskins wouldn’t stand a chance in hell of beating the Cowboys. I also read up on how marvelous, if not invincible,
the Cowboys offensive line was.
But, when you are a Redskins fan, like I am,
you “never say never.”
Turns out, I got the last laugh last
night! Skins 20 – Cowboys 17.
(from the Washington Post, on-line,
10/28/14)
ARLINGTON,
Tex. — A third-string quarterback, a rookie cornerback and a fierce defensive
stand combined to pull off a stunning upset in one of the NFL’s more storied
rivalries Monday night, as Washington toppled the heavily favored Dallas Cowboys on their home turf, 20-17, in overtime.
Quarterback Colt McCoy was as cool as they come in
overtime, not missing a throw as he marched Washington downfield on five
completions to Pierre Garcon, Jordan Reed and DeSean Jackson. Kai Forbath
capped the drive with a 40-yard field goal that supplied the crucial margin.
But Dallas
still had a chance to win the game under overtime rules. Its three-time Pro
Bowl quarterback Tony Romo, who had been forced out in the third quarter by a
bone-jarring sack, had re-entered the lineup for late-game heroics. They didn’t
materialize, with rookie Bashaud Breeland batting away Romo’s final throw and
bringing the game to its improbable end.
With it,
Washington (3-5) won back-to-back games for the first
time since the close of the 2012 regular season and snapped the Cowboys’
six-game winning streak. Washington also got its first victory in the NFC East
since December 2012.
The notion
that the Redskins could actually beat Dallas (6-2) drew laughter Sunday from a CBS NFL Today crew
that included football luminaries Bill Cowher, Boomer Esiason and Tony
Gonzalez. The entire panel of experts in ESPN’s Monday night pregame show picked against the Redskins.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
C2 Reprographics re-brands to C2 Imaging
Very recently, C2 Reprographics, one of the largest reprographics (oops, imaging) services enterprises in southern California, launched its name change and rebranding campaign. C2 is now called, "C2 Imaging".
Those of you, whose companies still have in their names, the words Blue Print or Blueprint, or Reprographics, or Reproduction, take note .... there's no time like the present to update your name and image.
Candidate for Governor of Illinois formerly an investor in Lason
Blog Publisher’s comments:
a)
I have no interest in Illinois
politics
b)
Rauner’s investment firm, GTCR,
was an investor in Lason, a company that purchased one sizeable “reprographics”
enterprise years ago. That company was
Consolidated Reprographics, then one of Orange County, CA’s two largest
reprographers (OCB Reprographics being the other.) After Lason purchased CR Reprographics and,
subsequently, went into bankruptcy, ARC Document Solutions purchased CR
Reprographics from Lason. ARC eventually
combined the operations of OCB Reprographics and CR Reprographics.
c)
Where the writers of the article
“knock” Rauner for a “black mark” on GTCR’s record, I can’t see where they came
to that conclusion! Rauner’s firm (GTCR)
earned megabucks on its investment in Lason.
The article states that GTCR received around $43 mil on three offerings
of Lason stock. I would be willing to
bet anyone that GTCR’s investment in Lason was a LOT LESS THAN $43 mil. The “losers” on Lason where those people (and
investment funds) that purchased Lason stock.
If you think that investment funds, investment companies, private equity
companies, etc. are ever remorseful about the fall of a company they were once
investors in, get real, that’s never the case.
d)
I’m not endorsing Rauner for
governor.
Chicago Tribune Editorial, October 10, 2014
For governor: The Tribune endorses Bruce Rauner, to
revive Illinois
The following article appeared in the Chicago Tribune on January
20, 2104 ….
GOP governor hopeful touts business savvy, but 1 investment leaves
a black mark on record
January 20, 2014|By Bob Secter and Jeff Coen, Tribune reporters
In an August 1999 interview with The Wall Street Transcript, a
subscription newsletter that features interviews with business leaders, Rauner
hailed Lason as a "great company … doing quite well," and went on to
describe an ownership philosophy at GTCR steeped in the kind of hands-on
involvement he now vows to bring to the governor's office if elected.
"We spend a lot of time living with our companies on a week-to-week
basis, understanding what's going on, and being in the flow of information, so
we can be helpful and knowledgeable about the operation," Rauner said.
He also explained how GTCR liked to build big companies
by buying up smaller ones in the same industry and rolling them together. And
that is exactly what happened at Lason, which under GTCR control gobbled up
more than 60 competitors in the U.S. and overseas markets in less than five
years, according to court records.
But the buying spree led to chaos, according to former Lason
President John Messinger, who described it as operating in "grab
mass" mode, according to a subsequent internal investigative report for
Lason that was included in federal criminal court records.
Gary Monroe, Lason's CEO and board chairman, said he was hired
with the backing of GTCR, whose goal was to grow the company through
acquisitions. Lason's approach was "to do a lot of deals very fast and
create more size and revenue as quickly as possible," investigators said
Monroe told them. They added "Monroe believes Lason did too much too
quickly."
Disorganization grew so acute that longtime customer General
Motors pulled much of its database management business from Lason after a
series of problems culminating in a weekslong disruption in 1998, according to
civil court documents.
Despite such problems, Lason reported record earnings quarter
after quarter, a feat that won it raves from stock analysts and boosted its
share price.
Lason held an initial public offering of stock in October 1996,
a sale that netted $11.8 million for Rauner's firm while reducing its ownership
stake to 30.7 percent, SEC records show.
A second public offering in August 1997 brought in another $19.5
million for GTCR while reducing its Lason stake to 15.1 percent, and a third
public offering in late summer 1998 reaped an additional $11.4 million for GTCR
while cutting its share of ownership to 3.4 percent. By the beginning of 1999,
GTCR owned two-tenths of 1 percent of Lason stock.
Prosecutors alleged that for most of that time — from
approximately 1997 through early 2000 — Lason's success was bolstered by
bookkeeping sleight of hand. The maneuver, referred to around the office as
"Tailwind," was orchestrated primarily by William Rauwerdink, Lason's
executive vice president and chief financial officer.
Rauwerdink, who eventually became a company director as well,
was hired by Rauner and fellow board members in 1996 just months after he was
sanctioned and fined more than $200,000 by the SEC over insider trading
allegations at his previous job. He neither admitted nor denied the
allegations, Lason noted in an annual report to the SEC.
Messinger told federal investigators the Tailwind scheme counted
on manipulating financial data from newly acquired companies to inflate Lason
earnings, driving up the stock price while masking Lason's real financial
condition. But the scheme began to unravel as acquisitions slowed and it became
difficult to meet Wall Street expectations with accounting tricks alone.
The solution of the Lason conspirators was to make up $13
million in anticipated revenues from work that wasn't real, according to court
records. To mislead investors and stock analysts, the false numbers were
highlighted in a company press release distributed in late October 1999. The
figures were also folded into an official report filed with the SEC on Nov. 15
that wrongly claimed operating income in the third quarter of 1999 had far
exceeded the same period the year before.
Amid those events, Rauner departed from the board. His
replacement took over Nov. 12, six months before the expiration of Rauner's
last term.
Lason's stock began to slip in the face of market fears the
company would not meet its goals, tumbling from $39.50 on Nov. 8 to $20.75 on
Dec. 8. In response, Lason officials issued public statements declaring the
company sound and blaming the stock drop on unfounded rumors about earnings
problems.
But on Dec. 17, the company did an about-face and issued a press
release acknowledging earnings were off. On the next trading day, the stock
price plunged 51 percent. It continued to drop as details of the alleged
financial chicanery began to emerge, reaching $2.50 a share by the time
investors' complaints were consolidated into one civil lawsuit in June 2000.
In 2001, Lason filed for bankruptcy. The Lason executives were
hit with assorted fraud charges in 2003, and all three pleaded guilty.
Rauwerdink received a nearly four-year prison sentence and was
ordered by a federal judge to pay $285 million in restitution. Monroe and
Messinger received shorter sentences and were ordered to pay $20 million apiece
in restitution.
At its height, Lason listed 10,000 workers in 29 states and
abroad, but by 2004 it reported just 2,700 employees. In 2007 it was sold to
HOV Services in India.
Repro 101 Blog Repro PPoP Index – updated for Q3 2014
PPoP = “plans printed on paper”
About the Repro
101 Blog Repro PPoP Index; what we’ve been saying all
along about this Index:
- This index does not
attempt to track "total sales" of A/E/C reprographers. It attempts to
track only sales of "plans printed on paper”.
- And, by "plans
printed on paper", I mean A/E/C "plans", large-format, b/w
and color, unbound or bound, full-size, half-size, whatever large-format size.
If you click on the link that’s immediately
below, you’ll find a table that contains all
of the Index readings since we first began publishing this Index, including
the most recent Index reading for Q3 2014:
Blog Publisher’s comments:
Based on the Q3 2014 Index reading, large-format
plan printing activity dropped off compared to the first two quarters of 2014.
Perhaps the Q4 Index, which we hope to be able to post in early January 2015,
will show evidence that the Q3 Index decline was an anomaly.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Xerox IJP 2000 (Memjet-enabled printer) Dealer for New England States
I learned
today that AIR Graphics, based in Quincy, MA, is the Xerox-appointed dealer for
the Xerox IJP 2000 (wide-format, Memjet-powered printer) for the six New
England States.
For those of you who are
geographically-challenged, that territory includes: Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.
For information
contact Leo Ladas, AIR Graphics, at lladas@airgraphics.com
or 617-471-3373, ext 225
I was aware
that AIR Graphics had acquired a Xerox IJP 2000 unit, but, before today, I did
not know that AIR Graphics was a dealer for the system.
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