How a Print Distributor Can Cut Your Production Costs

Print Distributor vs. In‑House Printing: Pros, Cons, and Costs

Summary

  • Print Distributor (Outsourced): External commercial printers or print management providers who handle production, finishing, fulfillment, and often mailing.
  • In‑House Printing: You own/operate printing equipment and staff to produce materials internally.

Pros & Cons

  1. Print Distributor — Pros
  • Lower upfront cost: No capital expenditure for presses/finishing equipment.
  • Access to expertise & tech: Commercial-grade equipment, specialty inks, finishing, colour matching, proofs.
  • Scalability & bulk pricing: Lower per‑unit cost on large runs; vendor can absorb volume spikes.
  • Faster access to specialised services: Variable data/personalisation, mailing, kitting, warehousing.
  • Reduced operational burden: No maintenance, supplies, or staffing for production.
  1. Print Distributor — Cons
  • Less direct control: Scheduling, quality checks, and last‑minute changes depend on vendor processes.
  • Lead times & shipping: Potential delays and logistics costs.
  • Vendor dependency & variability: Quality and service vary—requires vendor management.
  • Potentially higher per‑unit cost on very high recurring volume if economies of scale favor owning equipment.
  1. In‑House Printing — Pros
  • Maximum control & flexibility: Immediate changes, faster local turnaround for urgent jobs.
  • Confidentiality: Sensitive materials stay internal.
  • Potential long‑term savings: For consistently high volumes, owning equipment lowers per‑unit cost over time.
  • Immediate access for small/urgent runs: No external coordination or shipping.
  1. In‑House Printing — Cons
  • High upfront & ongoing costs: Capital purchase/lease of presses, finishing tools, consumables, utilities.
  • Maintenance & staffing: Technicians, training, downtime, repairs.
  • Limited capabilities unless you invest heavily: Speciality finishes, large format, or advanced colour control may still need vendors.
  • Inventory and space requirements: Stock storage and facility needs.

Cost Drivers (what to include in a comparison)

  • Upfront capital (purchase/lease of equipment)
  • Depreciation and financing costs
  • Consumables (paper, ink, toner, plates)
  • Maintenance, service contracts, repair downtime
  • Labour (operators, prepress, finishing)
  • Facility costs (space, utilities, waste disposal)
  • Shipping, fulfilment, postage (outsourced)
  • Quality control and reprint/waste rates
  • Volume and run length (affects per‑unit cost heavily)
  • Opportunity cost (staff time spent on printing vs. core tasks)

When each option typically makes sense

  • Choose a Print Distributor if:

    • You have low-to-moderate or highly variable print volumes.
    • You need specialised finishes, marketing mail, or fulfilment services.
    • You want to avoid capital expenditure and operational overhead.
    • Brand quality needs access to commercial equipment/expertise.
  • Choose In‑House Printing if:

    • You run very high, predictable volumes that justify equipment costs.
    • You need instant turnaround, frequent last‑minute edits, or strict confidentiality.
    • You can staff and maintain production cost‑effectively.
  • Consider a hybrid model: keep routine/urgent, low-volume jobs in-house and outsource large runs, specialty finishes, mailing, or overflow.

Quick decision checklist (use your data; default assumptions)

  1. Annual pages/units: <

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *