HP’s 3D Printing and Digital Manufacturing Center of Excellence [Image: Fabbaloo]
Charles Goulding & Ryan Donley of R&D Tax Savers discuss 3D printing R&D.
It is important to analyze the level of the R&D occurring at the leading 3D printer manufacturers to help understand just how quickly the industry is growing and why more companies are committing to the potential future of 3D printing.
[Source: R&D Tax Savers]
A table providing the last three years per capita R&D for eight companies’ public reporting purposes is presented above:
Some conclusions from the five company data for the pure play 3D printers, Stratasys, 3D Systems, Renishaw, Protolabs, and Organovo are as follows.
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This is an industry with a large commitment to R&D with three-year average spending of $191 million for all five pure 3D printing companies
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The pure 3D printer manufacturers are engineering/design-intensive since the average company per capita annual R&D spend is $142,540, this excludes GE and HP.
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Organovo, the organ printing ompany, has particularly large per capita numbers and very high yearly R&D growth but to date has a small employee count that slightly impacts the overall data results.
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GE and HP Inc. are not 3D printing-specific, though have committed large portions of R&D spending on 3D printing as the companies have a combined 15% market share in 3D printing (HP 6%, GE, 9%) and continue to grow their capabilities in this realm. Their large numbers skew the overall data results.
This table only reflects the R&D investment of large commercial 3D printer manufacturers. Other 3D printer or R&D investors include:
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Foreign, US Federal and Local Government
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Universities
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Software Developers
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Material Suppliers
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Designers & End Users
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Numerous privately held 3D printer manufacturers, many of which have large R&D budgets, including Desktop Metal, Markforged, and Carbon.