Kodak's Bold Move into Home Printers

Tue Feb 6, 2007 11:20AM EST

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Kodak is making a move into the inkjet printer market that just may pay off big time for consumers.

Ever since the rise of digital photography gutted the photo company's film development business, Kodak has been repositioning itself in the photography market. The company makes the three top best-selling digital cameras, but profit margins are low on consumer electronics. Kodak's plan to sell inkjet printers with cheaper ink cartridges is designed to gain a strong footing in another piece of the competitive market—especially in homes where parents and kids share computers and printers, the Wall Street Journal reports.

To win consumers' printer dollars in recent years, companies have been selling printers at little or no profit margins, and making profits in high-priced ink. Kodak aims to upend that model by selling printers at slightly higher prices but significantly dropping ink prices. Kodak's first printers will initially be sold only at Best Buy and on Kodak.com for $150, $200 (pictured), and $300. They are document printers as well as photo printers.

Each will use a $10 black ink cartridge and a $15 color-ink cartridge, totaling less than half of the $60 to $80 it typically costs to buy a full complement of black and color-ink cartridges for a printer.

Kodak says its research shows 70 percent of families restrict their children's printing because of the cost of ink, and the research firm IDC says 56 percent of families print some photos at home. Kodak says its printers will allow consumers to print photos for about 10 cents each—cheaper than any other way available right now.

Of course, the true test will be in the quality. But I'm one consumer who would welcome spending less on ink, which our family of five runs through rather quickly.

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  • 1 Posted by cyk1942 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    Kudos to Kodak if all that they say are really true. For the past few years I do not have an ink-jet printer at home because I consider the prices for their inks totally unreasonable. If Kodak's printer produces quality and durable photos at reasonable price levels (say one third of the current cost) I am sure many more people would print photos at home rather then sending them out for processing. Regards, DC

  • 2 Posted by greenmother2@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:12PM EDT Report Abuse

    Hooray, it's about time. when you have to keep replacing the color cartigages you have replaced the printer you brought three or four times. So in essence consumers print less in color to save cost of buying a new color cartigage and taking their photo to a Drug store to print their pictures. This is good news!

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