Electronics for Imaging
Electronics for Imaging is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Electronics for Imaging.
Electronics for Imaging is a company.
Key people at Electronics for Imaging.
Electronics for Imaging, Inc. (EFI) is a technology company specializing in digital printing solutions, including hardware like inkjet printers and color print controllers, software for business process automation, and front-end systems that enable high-quality color printing for offices, commercial print shops, and industrial applications.[1][2][3][4] It serves print producers, graphic designers, sign shops, packaging firms, and industries such as textiles and ceramics by solving challenges in transitioning from analog to digital printing, offering tools for color accuracy, workflow efficiency, and scalable production.[3][4] EFI's growth has been driven by product innovation, strategic acquisitions, and global expansion, evolving from a niche color server provider to a leader in industrial inkjet and productivity software, with segments including Industrial Inkjet (50.7% of 2015 sales), Fiery (33.9%), and Productivity Software (15.3%).[3][4]
EFI was founded in 1988 by Efraim “Efi” Arazi, a 51-year-old Israeli entrepreneur and visionary in computer graphics, who had previously built Scitex into a global leader in electronic color imaging and publishing hardware since the 1960s.[1][2][3] Arazi established the company in San Francisco, leveraging his expertise to target office color printing needs unmet by existing technology.[1][3] Early development in 1989-1990 focused on patented innovations, yielding products like the Eport Color Server for cross-device color transfer, Fiery Controller for turning copiers into color printers, Cachet software for image manipulation, and Color Receiver for linking desktop publishing to commercial printing—debuting the first Fiery server in 1991 alongside European expansion.[1][2][3] Pivotal moments included Cachet's 1993 launch as a shrink-wrapped $500-600 product and reaching 50,000 Fiery installations by 1996, fueling mid-1990s explosive growth.[1][2]
EFI rode the 1990s shift from analog to digital printing, capitalizing on desktop publishing's rise and demand for affordable, high-quality color output in offices and commercial settings.[1][2] Timing aligned with computing advances and the internet boom, enabling products like Fiery to bridge copiers, scanners, and printers amid explosive mid-1990s growth.[1] Market forces favoring EFI included globalization of print (strong overseas sales), inkjet commoditization (prompting 2000s pivots to industrial applications), and automation needs in packaging/textiles, amplified by acquisitions that filled portfolio gaps.[3][4] It influences the ecosystem by accelerating analog-to-digital transitions for print producers, fostering innovations in inkjet, workflow software, and hybrid analog-digital tools that boost efficiency for underserved sectors like signage and ceramics.[3]
EFI's trajectory points to deeper integration of AI-driven automation and sustainable inks in industrial printing, building on its inkjet dominance and software suites to capture expanding digital textile, packaging, and signage markets.[3][4] Trends like cloud-based workflows (e.g., Pace) and superwide-format graphics will shape growth, potentially via more targeted acquisitions amid print industry's digital overhaul. Its influence may evolve from hardware pioneer to full-stack platform provider, empowering print producers' profitability in a post-analog world—echoing Arazi's vision of brilliant, accessible imagery.[1][3]
Key people at Electronics for Imaging.