In-Store Photo Printing Making A Comeback
New
York -AUG 06 Old habits apparently do die hard. Consumers were used to
dropping off their rolls of film to get them developed, and digital
camera users are no different.An IDC report shows that overall, digital
image printing has grown 29% in 2005 to 15 pictures a month from 11.5
in 2004. Home printing remains strong, with consumers printing ten
prints a month, compared with 8.8 last year, while retail printing has
leapt to 3.8 prints from 2.5.”The pie is growing bigger,” said Chris
Chute, senior analyst at IDC. “So while the overall volume of prints is
increasing, the share of at-home printing is going down.”By the end of
2005, digital photographers will be snapping about 75 pictures a month,
up from 57, the report said. Contributing to this growth are the lower
prices and higher functionality of digital cameras and flash memory
cards.Ron Glaz, program director for IDC’s digital capture devices and
photofinishingresearch, said manufacturers and retailers are prepared
for the change. “In order for digital photography to continue to move
into the mass market, people need to be able to get their prints in the
way they’re already used to: by dropping it off while they’re
shopping,” he said.Retailers are happy to oblige. Hewlett-Packard will
announce today a deal that lets users of its Snapfish online photo
service order prints online and pick them as soon as an hour later at a
local Walgreen store Other retailers, such as Costco Wal-Mart Stores
(nyse: WMT – news – people ) and Target , are also in the printing
game, operating self-branded photo centers or partnering with an
imaging company. Eastman Kodak says revenue from its in-store kiosks
has grown more than 200% in the first half of 2005.”Home printing
started out strong when digital cameras were PC-peripheral and still
mostly used by techies,” Chute said. “These days, even people who
aren’t comfortable with computers have adopted digital cameras. And
they’re just more comfortable going to retail locations.”