A closer look at printing efficiency in offices
Rising costs and growing efficiency demands are prompting organisations to re-examine practices that may have long gone unquestioned


Across workplaces, many operational decisions gradually become defaults. Processes, tools, and technologies continue unchanged even as business priorities evolve. While familiarity brings stability, it can also conceal inefficiencies that accumulate over time. Printing is one such example.
Despite rapid digitisation, offices have not become paperless. Contracts, invoices, compliance documents, internal records, and working notes still require physical copies. Printing therefore remains embedded in daily operations, functioning in the background. Because it works without disruption, it is rarely reassessed, and efficiency is often assumed rather than examined.
The economics of laser printing are shaped by how the technology works. Laser printers transfer toner particles onto paper and fuse them using heat through a fuser unit. During this process, an entry-level laser printer can consume around 300-450 watts of power. Across offices running multiple devices and steady print volumes, this energy consumption accumulates gradually, often without close attention.
Operational realities add to the impact. Frequent toner replacements, higher printing costs, storage and handling of bulky consumables, and the steady accumulation of e-waste are commonly treated as routine expenses¹. Individually manageable, together they create recurring operational costs with both financial and environmental implications. When printing is viewed as an operational system rather than a basic utility, these inefficiencies become clearer.
The advantages become more visible at scale. A lower cost per page supports efficiency even at modest print volumes, while deployment across larger fleets or multiple locations may reduce energy usage and consumables. For organisations balancing operational costs with sustainability goals, such considerations are relevant.
“Moving to inkjet is not just a technology shift; it reflects a strategic focus on efficiency, sustainability, and long-term business value,” says Samba Moorthy, President, Epson India. “Inkjet printing technology enables organisations to manage printing costs more efficiently while using fewer resources over time.”
As businesses reassess everyday operations through the lenses of cost discipline and sustainability, routine infrastructure choices like printing are being reconsidered - and Epson’s EcoTank printers are being considered a very relevant option.
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___________________________________________________________________________________________________Disclaimer:
¹Statements regarding toner replacement frequency, printing costs, consumable storage requirements, and associated e-waste are based on comparisons between Epson Monochrome EcoTank models and popular, top-selling comparable entry-level monochrome laser printer models from leading brands, using publicly available manufacturer specifications on declared page yield, consumable capacity, and cartridge size. Replacement frequency and cost per print are derived from published yield data and toner price, while storage and e-waste considerations reflect relative consumable size and replacement intervals. Actual results may vary depending on print volume, page coverage, usage patterns, and operating conditions.
The pages slugged ‘Brand Connect’ are equivalent to advertisements and are not written and produced by Forbes India journalists.
First Published: Mar 19, 2026, 17:17
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