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How to Save Green When You Are Buying Blue
Home :: Business :: Marketing & Advertising
By: Lorraine Ball Email Article
Word Count: 907 Digg it | Del.icio.us it | Google it | StumbleUpon it

  

In the mid-Fifteenth Century, when Johann Guttenburg brought moveable type printing to the western world I doubt he envisioned the industry he would create. Today, printing is a significant line item on every business budget. Invoices, contracts, business cards, letterhead, and brochures are all part of the day-to-day operations of every business.

Often when the bill comes, it feels like you are carrying the whole

$90 billion industry by yourself. There are, however, ways to save money on printing, if you know the right questions to ask..

The most important thing to remember if you want to save money on printing is that printing is a production business. Large jobs and long runs are less expensive than short ones, so plan ahead! The most expensive part of the process is the set up. Once the press is running, your per piece cost goes down with every page you print. For example: I recently designed a small tri-fold brochure for a client. The printer’s quote looked like this:

500 pieces $450

1,500 pieces $650

2,500 pieces $750

This is fairly typical whether you are printing 500 or 5,000 pieces. The more you print, the lower the per piece cost. It was easy for this client to make the decision to print the higher quantity instead of planning a reprint six months later. But what if you really don’t need more?

Ask about GANG RUNS. When you print 1,000 postcards your printer is actually laying them out on a larger sheet of paper possibly 4 to a page or 8 to a page like this:

When printing is complete, the printer will cut the page divide the finished project into piles. It doesn’t matter to him if the four piles are the same or different, but your savings could be tremendous. Using the Gang Run format, you can actually create four different cards and print them at the same time. Look at the potential savings on four batches of 1,000 postcards:

Printed separately $500 each run for a total of $2,000

Printed in a gang run for a total of $750

The benefits are obvious, but there is work involved. You must invest time up front to think about your printing needs for the next six months or year. Then bring that plan to a meeting with a printer, and let him help you look for ways to save money.

Another way to use the gang run is to create a "shell". Letterhead is an example of a shell. With your logo and address at the top, the center is blank so you can run individual letters through your desktop printer one at a time.

This same strategy will work with postcards or newsletters. Working with your printer, design a shell and pre-print a one-year supply in color. Then when you need some, you can either print small quantities on your in-house printer, or have the commercial printer overprint the specific information in black ink. The result; the finished product has a professional, full color look, for significantly less.

Creative use of color can also save you money. Black and white doesn’t have to be boring! Using reverses and ½ tones you can create the illusion a piece has more than one or two colors. Also, one color in doesn’t have to be black. Dark blues and dark greens are extremely legible, and much more eye catching, without being any more expensive.

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An experienced marketing professional, Lorraine Ball teaches business owners across the country how to use creativity and planning achieve exceptional results. Her marketing firm, Roundpeg http://www.roundpeg.biz, helps small business owners become big business owners. Her personal ramblings can be found at http://www.lorraineball.com

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