“There is no doubt that people are moving away from the hyped up consumer 3D printing idea. No one is talking about it any more. Now it is all about the industry and the incredible possibilities that 3D printing can offer to professionals at all levels,” Mr. Burger explains as we sit down to start the interview.
“I came to Ultimaker to do the four things that a CEO should do: make sure the structure makes sense, have the right people on board to ensure Ultimaker’s success, make sure the company always has cash and be able to explain the story of the company in a few minutes,” he says.
Mr. Burger’s informal approach is aligned with a very clear vision on how to successful scale up globally, something that Dutch 3D printing companies like Ultimaker as well as Formfutura, colorFabb, 3D Hubs and Shapeways seem to be particularly good at.
“I think it has to do with Holland’s historical tradition as a small country where people always understood they needed to trade globally in order to generate revenues and obtain,” Mr. Burger explains. “The Dutch have traded all over the world for centuries and this approach is perfectly aligned with a small and yet globally distributed industry such as 3D printing.”
“Next we are looking to the APEC countries,” Mr. Burger says, “We are seeing a lot of interest for our machines in China, South Korea and Japan”.
How is Ultimaker so successful as a global brand, in spite of the intense competition from local 3D system manufacturers? Mr. Burger believes it is a combination of factors.
“For one, we have been extremely loyal to our customers,” he says. “We’ve had our issues but we always kept our friends very close to us and have been able to accommodate them in many different aspects. We have built a global support infrastructure while we also stayed true to our original hardware open source philosophy. That gave us a lot both in terms of actual contributions to R&D and in increasing the loyalty of our customer base.”
“We have been lucky because some of our main competitors did deliver what the market was expecting from them to and we were ideally positioned to take advantage of that. We don’t believe in companies that are only selling boxes, that is not working anymore, and we wanted to be able to offer our customers a complete solution, which includes a wider range of materials and software. We invested significantly in compliance in order to best cater to the professional needs of companies. It is amazing how the adoption of our systems is expanding in the industry, bringing immediate benefits to more and more smaller companies, not just the larger ones.” Now more young people are starting with their own 3D printers, growing up as engineers and moving into companies bringing new ideas and processes. “We are fully blown away by the adoption rate in the industry,” Mr. Burger says.
“In education you need an effective tool to manage several projects, while in the industrial sector we are seeing that more people are looking for customized series of objects,” Mr. Burger explains. “Typically we are talking about series of 200-800 pieces. You just cannot do these kind of numbers through the traditional industrial infrastructure so we see a lot of companies moving in this way. We see it simply an a necessary evolutionary step as people realize that if you combine 50 to 100 printers you can facilitate many applications in automotive, aerospace and even in the consumer goods segment.”
Now it is time to look to the future and Ultimaker sees itself as a strategic and complementary element of a global push toward real digital, additive manufacturing. This vision takes into consideration companies like HP, which Mr. Burger applauded as the ideal technology for digital manufacturing even higher numbers of parts, as well as the 3MF file format and Consortium, which Ultimaker is part of, and which seeks to develop (Mr. Burger said they are very close to delivering) a more efficient and practical open 3D file format.
“As far as we are specifically concerned, over the next two years we are going to continue to offer our customers complete and fully compliant solutions,” he says. “We are going to bring new machines to the market as long as it makes commercial sense to do. We can’t be too specific but we will certainly focus on enabling our customers to 3D print far more complex products with an ever growing range of materials.”
It really seems like we are only beginning to scratch the surface of the possibilities and Ultimaker seems ideally positioned to continue driving the market in news directions.