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What do a snowboard company founder, a pop star and graphic designer have in common? They've lent their names to Hewlett-Packard's $300 million Print 2.0 marketing campaign.
Singer Gwen Stefani, Burton Snowboards's Jake Burton and graphic designer Paula Scher are each featured on a separate HP Web site. Burton's and Scher's sites offer tips for small- and medium-sized businesses on how to build a brand, and of course, how to use printed materials to accomplish that. Stefani's HP site, aimed at consumers, provides templates to create greeting cards and other materials.
A spokesman representing HP won't disclose, at least for now, how much is allocated to online, television, or print ads. She says, in an e-mail, that the $300 million figure includes "not only advertising spending, but also spending on Web elements (e.g. the Gwen Stefani, Jake Burton and Paula Scher Web sites), in-store elements, alliances, etc."
HP, in touting those alliances, says it wants to make it easier to publish from the Web to printed media such as photo albums. Yahoo's Flickr, a photo sharing site, for instance, will incorporate HP technology, to create customized posters and other products.
No doubt, print's important to HP. The company's imaging and printing division reported $26.8 billion in revenue for the fiscal year ended Oct. 31, 2006; that represents close to 30 percent of HP's 2006 annual revenue.
A news release announcing the marketing campaign is sure to make a tree hugger cringe. HP says it's trying to capture a bigger portion of the 53 trillion pages it expects will be printed by 2010.
Posted by Anna Maria Virzi at August 28, 2007 4:08 PM
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HP’s ONE multivendor alliance program is a logical step in adding more data center value for their existing ProCurve customers. Customers, however, must beware as “the devil is in the details” and even more so in “the operational complexity” that can result from trying to take advantage of infrastructure and equipment consolidation without having the supporting IP service integration properly designed and innovated.
Used Refurbished Laptops March 31, 2009 8:46 AM
bought the laptop on March from a BestBuy and it broke on April. The video screen got corrupted/jumbled and didn't work anymore. I sent it back to HP, through BestBuy since HP has a 1 year warranty on it. When in line at BestBuy to send it back, I found out there were 2 other people waiting in line to send their HP Laptops (the same model I had) for the exact same problem!
HP sent it back and refused to fix it because they said the machine was "dirty". How can "dirty" be a deal-breaker?!!! I had the laptop in a normal desk setup, it didn't get any more dirty than anything else around it. Saying they won't fix something because it's "dirty" gives them card-blanch to refuse service on ANYTHING! Basically their warranties mean NOTHING!!! Don't buy from this company - they make faulty equipment that they refuse to service for any reason or no reason at all.
Used Refurbished Laptops April 8, 2009 8:06 AM