In 1969, Landa began his professional career at CAPS, a micrographics research company. He helped develop a new micrographic product that earned the company a major contract with Rolls-Royce Aero Engine Division and led to Landa’s appointment as head of Research and Development. In 1971, Benny Landa and a colleague co-founded Imtec, an international micrographics company. Landa invented the company’s core imaging technology. While researching liquid toners, he developed a method of high-speed image development which used charged pigmented particles in a liquid carrier. Landa immigrated to Israel in 1974. Applying the filmless imaging concept developed by his father, Landa founded Indigo Digital Printing in 1977. In 1993 at IPEX, he introduced the E-Print 1000, a digital color printing press. Bypassing the printing plate setup process, the new process eliminated numerous costly and time-consuming steps associated with offset printing. It enabled printing from a computer file directly onto paper and launched short-run, on-demand, and variable data printing into the marketplace. The Indigo digital press uses an electric charge to apply small color particles, thereby creating a thin, smooth, plastic layer on the substrate. By the 1990s, Indigo became a significant alternative to traditional offset press manufacturers. In 2002, Landa sold Indigo Digital Printing to Hewlett-Packard for US$830 million. Following the acquisition of Indigo, Landa established The Landa Group for nanotechnology research. Working with nanoparticles, Landa and his team sought to capture environmental heat from the surrounding air and convert it into electricity. Landa’s research group observed that many materials exhibit unusual properties at the nano-level. They used that discovery to experiment with pigment colorants for print production. Landa created Landa Digital Printing to further commercialize the nanotechnology solution for printing. The group developed a printing ink using the nanopigments, which they named Landa NanoInk, along with a digital printing process which they called Nanography. This process uses inkjet heads that place the process colours of ink onto a belt, which in turn deposits the resulting image onto paper. Landa introduced Nanography and a line of Nanographic Printing presses at Drupa in 2012. The new nanography technology enables high-speed digital printing with B1 format media on all forms of substrates, including untreated paper, films, or plastic. The goal is to allow printers to produce short-to-medium run lengths. The long-term cost effectiveness of the process is still to be determined, since no live production presses have yet been producing sellable work over extended time frames.
Philanthropy
In 2002, Landa and his wife Patsy established the Landa Fund for Equal Opportunity Through Education which has donated more than $50 million in university scholarships. The Landa Fund also supports non-profit organizations in the fields of education and promoting tolerance and understanding between Israel’s Jewish and Arab citizens.
In 2014, Landa was named by international accounting firm Ernst & Young as “Israel Entrepreneur of the Year.” In April 2015, Printing Industries of New England presented Landa with its PINE Industry Influencer Award.
Optical Society of America, Edwin H. Land Medal, 2002