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| "The most successful product ever marketed in America" | | Print | |
| Library | |
| Written by Noric Dilanchian | |
| Wednesday, 18 October 2006 | |
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Page 5 of 6
14. Celebrate
![]() Xerox 914
It
was not until 1959 when the Xerox 914 was
release that things finally really took off. The Xerox 914 (see accompanying photo) was the first
automatic, plain-paper office copier.
Each 914 cost roughly $US2,000 to manufacture, a figure which did not
include the cost of parts and labour. By the time it was completed
Haloid Xerox (as it was then named) had spent $US12.5 million
developing it - an investment that exceeded the company's total
earnings during the entire decade of the fifties.
Making a copy on a 914 was seductively easy, all you had to do was push a button. Donald Clark, the marketing chief for the 914 said:
![]() 1961 ad for the 914
And so began the waterfall of revenues for the Haloid Company, which became Haloid Xerox and then Xerox Corporation:
In 1968 Fortune estimated Carlson's wealth at $150
million. Carlson wrote a terse correction writes Owen. Carlson wrote:
"Your estimate of my net worth is too high by $US150 million. I belong
in the 0 to $US50 million bracket." Carlson had been quietly involved
in giving his fortune away.
With Haloid, Xerox and his many other collaborators Carlson worked diligently, lived very modestly and kept his cool despite years and years of struggle realising his dream.
The most touching sentence in the Copies in Seconds appears under a caption to a photograph. It is a photo of Chester Carlson and his second wife, Dorris Carlson sitting outside their modest house in 1965. It quotes Dorris saying of her husband after his death. 'His real wealth seemed to be composed of the number of things he could easily do without.'
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