Print
Solutions November 2005
433
East Monroe
Help
Clients See Hidden Costs
Several
attendees at DMIA’s Print
Solutions 2005 Conference &
Expo in Orlando chatted with me
at the event about a challenge
they face—trumpeting their
companies’ value to prospects
who first want to talk about price.
I imagine salespeople in every
industry face the same obstacle,
but it’s now a momentous
topic in the largely commoditized
printing industry, whose salespeople
want to be known as solution providers
instead of product peddlers.
When
a prospect asks, “How much
will 5,000 32-page, black-and-white
training manuals cost?”
he or she is referring to exactly
that—the cost of the printed
manuals. Most end users focus
on production cost per page and
the number at the bottom of the
invoice. Comparatively few realize
that for each dollar they spend
on printing, they spend an additional
six dollars on the creation, management,
warehousing and inventory, distribution
and fulfillment, and obsolescence
of the printed product, according
to CAP Ventures, a strategic consulting
firm for providers and users of
digital business communication
technologies and services.
That
means a company with annual revenues
of $500 million spends $10 million
on printing and finishing services,
and an additional $60 million
on associated process costs. To
the extent those process costs
can be reduced—by enhancing
employee productivity, diminishing
waste due to obsolescence, increasing
customer satisfaction and more—savings
accrued by improving process efficiencies
will fall directly to the bottom
line. On process costs of $60
million, even 10 percent cost
savings (easily achievable with
efficient management of the business
communications process) almost
offsets the cost of the actual
printing, according to CAP Ventures.
In
most cases, customers should worry
about cost of the process, not
the product. The onus is on printing
companies to help them see the
light. Distributors today have
significant opportunities to improve
their customers’ productivity
and efficiency by addressing activities
that take place before and after
materials are printed. When a
prospect asks about the price
of business documents, salespeople
should consider the human capital
required to create, manage, produce
and distribute them: Why was the
document printed? What business
purpose is the document serving?
How did the document go from a
software system to manufactured
output?
I
think the best long-term answer
for printing firms is leveraging
the power of the web and digital
printing to gain control of document-related
expenses. End users are demanding
shorter runs and more targeted
pieces, and on-demand color printing
is becoming more affordable. The
most efficient way to produce
and distribute the training manuals
mentioned earlier is for the client
to create the content and upload
it to a web-based document repository.
Using web-to-print technology,
the end user could modify the
document when necessary, customize
specifications (paper weight,
spine and cover inserts, finishing
process), specify ship-to address(es),
and authorize access to the digital
files to others in the organization.
Lead times would reduce significantly,
and orders could be placed anytime
and anywhere by using a secure
internet site. The client could
check production and shipping
statuses and have access to customize
usage reports and real-time warehousing
data.
Web-to-print
technology is the future of our
industry, and it’s an ideal
way distributors can help their
clients realize that value trumps
price.
Darin
Painter