ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Databases Toolkit

Quark faces up to its mistakes

Colin Barker ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 05 Jun 2006 12:05 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

As it gears up to try to retake market share lost to rival Adobe, Quark has admitted that previous mistakes have hurt the company.

At the launch of XPress 7 in Europe on Friday, Quark announced a simpler pricing structure, the return of printed manuals and "160 new features", including a chat facility and a "completely re-written" graphics engine. But while the company said the much-anticipated version of XPress 7 for Intel Macs was coming "soon", a firm launch date was not available.

Matthew Wallis, vice-president for sales and marketing in Europe, admitted that "for a while" the company had not been attentive enough, and had operated with only a small European sales and support structure, running everything from the US. "We had been criticised for not being in Europe enough," Wallis said. "We have now invested a huge amount of time and money here, and quadrupled the staff."

But one of the biggest complaints had been over XPress' complex pricing model. "You used to have to go through a book to understand all the options to upgrade Quark," said Wallis. "Now it is one price and that is it."

The full edition of Quark costs £749, versus £249 for the upgrade which, according to Wallis, is available to all Quark customers regardless of which previous version they are running.

There is also an Education licence for £130 and a Lab Pack, which offers a per-seat licence of £65.

Much of the emphasis in the upgraded version of XPress had been on graphics and illustrations. "One of the things we have been spending a lot of money on is better support for [Adobe] Photoshop," said Jürgen Kurz, senior vice-president at Quark. "We now have the best Photoshop integration on the market."

The new software adds more support for open standards in documents and pages, another area where the company had been criticised. "Standards? That was something else we didn't do when we were in our own little world," said Kurz. "We support XML, PDF, HTML, PPML and others now."

While it is known that Quark has lost a lot of market share to products such as Adobe's InDesign, the company is reluctant to discuss numbers. It still maintains that it has 80 percent of the page layout market, but admits many users will have more than one page layout system.

Quark continues to be one of the few companies that offers free support. Wallis said this will not change in the near future, and will now include a free paper manual with every version of Quark, and a new computer-based video tutorial system.

"We are the only one in the industry to offer free support," said Kurz. "We surveyed our customers over printed manuals and it was very clear that that was what they wanted. It does make it so much easier when you are working on the screen — to be able to look something up."

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Dell

Did you find this article useful?
115 out of 214 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:







Related Jobs

SAP FI/Co consultant for Major Wholesale company.

You must own a car or have a driving licence as there is a company car benefit to this position. You will be joining a company where the current SAP ...

SAP Application Analyst - SAP ABAP - Berkshire

This long-standing SAP Customer has is currently running SAP and is in the middle of a global ECC upgrade. This organisation is one of the largest ...

SAP BI, SAP Business Intelligence Analyst, Huge SAP Projects - London

The lucky, successful SAP BI/SAP BW candidate will be able to work on a huge European business reorganisation projects and help in a large SAP ECC6 ...

Featured Talkback

How can it be true that doing the work of gathering and concentrating information about a person and placing it in a single database with multiple access routes; makes that information more secure?! I would suggest that most people would make the implicit assumption that that would make it *less* secure.

By: Andrew Meredith

Read full story:
Police chief criticises ID cards scheme

Discussions

harpless harpless

SAP goes big business

Friday 25 July 2008, 6:17 PM

1 comment
pjc158 pjc158

Will Drizzle rain on Sun's MySql

Friday 25 July 2008, 5:30 PM

1 comment
pjc158 pjc158

Show me the money!

Friday 25 July 2008, 5:18 PM

5 comments