A specialty retailer operating 25 stores across northern Spain had reached the point where every store had a different copier, supplier and contract. Sixteen months of standardisation work produced one device per store, one contract, one support number, and a 28% reduction in per store print cost.
The retailer operates branded stores in mid sized cities and shopping centres across Asturias, Cantabria, Basque Country, La Rioja and Aragón. Each store has between four and eight staff, with a manager, a back office for stock and accounts, and front of house sales staff. Each store prints daily: dispatch labels, receipts, internal stock counts, supplier returns paperwork, and rota schedules. Monthly volumes per store range from 800 to 2,400 pages, with very low colour share.
The fleet had grown organically as new stores opened. The procurement decision sat with each store manager at opening time. Different managers chose different brands at different price points with different service arrangements. By 2024 the fleet included 25 devices across 9 brands and 14 distinct models, with 18 separate supplier relationships.
The finance director triggered the project after a December reconciliation exercise revealed that 25 stores were producing 18 different print invoices, with monthly per page costs ranging from 0.014 to 0.046 euros. Some stores were paying for monthly minimums they never reached. Others were paying excess page surcharges at multiples of the contracted rate. Five stores held no service contract at all and called local technicians ad hoc, with no record kept centrally.
The chain established a single model: one A4 colour MFP per store, on a single managed print services contract with one supplier covering all 25 sites. Three reasons drove the choice. First, a single supplier with national coverage absorbed travel cost into the service contract rather than adding it per call. Second, a single device model across all 25 stores meant one driver, one configuration template, and one set of consumables to stock centrally. Third, the volume across 25 stores produced procurement leverage that no individual store could have generated.
| Element | Before | After |
|---|---|---|
| Device models | 14 distinct models | 1 model across 25 stores |
| Suppliers | 18 supplier relationships | 1 national MPS provider |
| Contracts | 17 contract types, 5 ad hoc | 1 framework, 25 site annexes |
| Invoice cadence | Mixed: monthly, quarterly, ad hoc | Single monthly consolidated invoice |
| Service number | 18 different lines | 1 national helpline |
| Average per page cost | 0.028 euros (range 0.014 to 0.046) | 0.020 euros, all stores |
| Monthly print cost (all stores) | €8,640 | €6,220 |
Two months of meter data collected manually from each device to establish accurate per store volume. Used as the procurement baseline.
Three providers shortlisted on national coverage. RFP carried the meter data and required per store pricing rather than blended pricing.
Selected provider on combination of price, national coverage map and same business day SLA across all 25 sites including remote locations.
Five waves of five stores each, by region. Each wave completed in two weeks: one for device install, one for incumbent decommissioning.
One universal driver configured at head office, deployed to all store laptops via MDM. Eliminated the need for per store driver setup.
Head office holds 50 cartridges as central reserve. Stores no longer hold consumables; cartridges ship from central store on auto reorder.
30 minute video call with all 25 managers covered the new device, the new service number, and the new auto consumable replenishment.
Head office reviews per store volume and incident reports each quarter. Outliers prompt a store visit by the area manager.
The biggest non monetary win for store managers was time. Each manager had previously been responsible for ordering toner, scheduling service calls and reconciling supplier invoices for their store. The standardised framework moves all three to head office.
Store managers now interact with the print fleet only at install, when consumables arrive, and on the rare service call. Total store level time spent on print operations fell from approximately 2 hours per month to under 15 minutes.
The 28% reduction in per store print cost breaks down across five lines. Each contributed differently to the total.
| Saving source | Share of total saving |
|---|---|
| Lower per page cost via volume discount | 52% |
| Removal of minimum monthly commitments | 21% |
| Service cost consolidation | 14% |
| Reduced consumables waste via central stock | 8% |
| Removal of premium ad hoc call out fees | 5% |
Three issues surfaced and warrant noting for similar multi site rollouts.
The Jaca store occupies an unusual heritage building with limited space at the back office. The standard device did not fit; the installation team measured the space twice before specifying an A4 colour MFP with a single tray configuration (the standard ships with a 2 tray configuration). One store specific deviation in 25 was acceptable.
Two regional managers initially insisted on holding local toner reserves at store level, citing past supply issues. The first quarter of auto replenishment ran cleanly enough that both stood down. Future rollouts plan to include a one quarter pilot to address this objection upfront.
The Logroño store's incumbent contract carried a six month notice clause. Termination required a 1,400 euro buyout, paid by the new MPS provider as part of the framework deal. This kind of issue is normal in multi site rollouts and worth flagging during the RFP.
At the two year contract anniversary, the chain renewed for a further three years with three adjustments. Indexation capped at the lower of CPI or 3% per year. Service SLA tightened to four hour first response on critical stores (those with adjacent retail competitors where downtime hurt most). The framework added an option to deploy a second device per store on three year notice as volume grows, without requiring a fresh contract.