2 Minutes with Valerie Price, BIA Conference Chair and Director of Business, Coyne Graphic Finishing

Binders and Printers. A match made in heaven? This year’s BIA Annual Conference, one of the most popular postpress networking and education forums, is teaming up with the 2015 Print Leadership Summit in Minneapolis May 18-19 for a synergistic event that will surely have people talking. Here Valerie Price tells us about the benefits of the NEW BIA and why their upcoming conference is a one-of-a-kind opportunity for members.  Q: As the industry continues to advance, how can postpress companies stay ahead of the game? How can they retain a competitive advantage? VP: By always knowing what is happening within the printing environment, staying up to date with the leading-edge printers, and creating partnerships between print and finishing. Another best practice is educating printers on binderies and why it’s sometimes better to send their finishing to an expert rather than trying to keep everything in house. Q: The BIA rebranded in 2014. Can you tell us about the BIA’s fresh focus and the benefits it offers members? VP: Our new value proposition expands the member services. Not only can companies join the BIA directly now, but we also have our own industry-specific Ratios, training through the Integrated Learning Center, and many more unique advantages. BIA members now have access to the Human Resource listserv, moderated by PIA’s Jim Kyger, and have direct access to environmental, health, and safety resources with the help of expert Gary Jones. These are huge assets to smaller companies that do not have the resources. And that’s not all. BIA members also enjoy access to the monthly newsletter Bound for Excellence, Peer Groups, and so much more. Read the extended interview with Valerie Price, including an insider’s look at the upcoming BIA Conference, in the April issue of The Magazine (member login...

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2 Minutes with Valerie Price, BIA Conference Chair and Director of Business, Coyne Graphic Finishing

Binders and Printers. A match made in heaven? This year’s BIA Annual Conference, one of the most popular postpress networking and education forums, is teaming up with the 2015 Print Leadership Summit in Minneapolis May 18-19 for a synergistic event that will surely have people talking. Here Valerie Price tells us about the benefits of the NEW BIA and why their upcoming conference is a one-of-a-kind opportunity for members.  Q: As the industry continues to advance, how can postpress companies stay ahead of the game? How can they retain a competitive advantage? VP: By always knowing what is happening within the printing environment, staying up to date with the leading-edge printers, and creating partnerships between print and finishing. Another best practice is educating printers on binderies and why it’s sometimes better to send their finishing to an expert rather than trying to keep everything in house. Q: The BIA rebranded in 2014. Can you tell us about the BIA’s fresh focus and the benefits it offers members? VP: Our new value proposition expands the member services. Not only can companies join the BIA directly now, but we also have our own industry-specific Ratios, training through the Integrated Learning Center, and many more unique advantages. BIA members now have access to the Human Resource listserv, moderated by PIA’s Jim Kyger, and have direct access to environmental, health, and safety resources with the help of expert Gary Jones. These are huge assets to smaller companies that do not have the resources. And that’s not all. BIA members also enjoy access to the monthly newsletter Bound for Excellence, Peer Groups, and so much more. Read the extended interview with Valerie Price, including an insider’s look at the upcoming BIA Conference, in the April issue of The Magazine (member login...

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The Phone is Dead. Long Live the Phone!

This post was contributed by Kelly Quinn Mallozzi, RainMaker, Success.In.Print and speaker at the 2015 Print Leadership Summit, May 18-19 in Minneapolis, MN. It’s hard to believe that 21 short years ago, when I got my start in sales for a small digital print shop, my sales tools were a desk, a landline, a pager, and my resourceful brain. No cell phone. Certainly no smart phone. And a shared computer that only had access to the company’s database of accounts wasn’t in the picture. I called companies that I thought might have a need for printing, and if they did, I would get an appointment, go see them, talk to them, show them samples, and a good lot of the time, they would become customers.  And that worked for me, for kind of a long time.   And gradually times changed. I got my first cell phone a couple of years later. The company got access to the internet and that made it easier on me when a client was looking for some particular item for a project and I had no idea where to go. No longer did I have to grab the yellow pages and start dialing looking for lengths of nickel chain or a particular kind of laminate that was dry-erasable. I adapted my skills and ability to access resources based on the tools available to me at the time. Adaptation is scary and exciting and cool, and it’s often the way through challenging times. It allows people who are willing to adapt to soar to new heights. And it often leaves those who are unwilling to adapt feeling left behind and lost—as if they are missing out on something. And they are missing out on something. Today when it comes to communication—both one-on-one and to a mass audience—there are so many new tools available to us. I know you know what many of them are: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn.  At the 2015 Leadership Summit I’ll be talking about 11 different ways to engage with your customers that go beyond the phone. You’ll still use the phone. It will never die. But there are some great new ways to get your message heard. So join me on Tuesday, May 19th and get ready to celebrate the new life of new communication! For more on the 2015 Print Leadership Summit, May 18-19, 2015, in Minneapolis, MN, visit...

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The Phone is Dead. Long Live the Phone!

This post was contributed by Kelly Quinn Mallozzi, RainMaker, Success.In.Print and speaker at the 2015 Print Leadership Summit, May 18-19 in Minneapolis, MN. It’s hard to believe that 21 short years ago, when I got my start in sales for a small digital print shop, my sales tools were a desk, a landline, a pager, and my resourceful brain. No cell phone. Certainly no smart phone. And a shared computer that only had access to the company’s database of accounts wasn’t in the picture. I called companies that I thought might have a need for printing, and if they did, I would get an appointment, go see them, talk to them, show them samples, and a good lot of the time, they would become customers.  And that worked for me, for kind of a long time.   And gradually times changed. I got my first cell phone a couple of years later. The company got access to the internet and that made it easier on me when a client was looking for some particular item for a project and I had no idea where to go. No longer did I have to grab the yellow pages and start dialing looking for lengths of nickel chain or a particular kind of laminate that was dry-erasable. I adapted my skills and ability to access resources based on the tools available to me at the time. Adaptation is scary and exciting and cool, and it’s often the way through challenging times. It allows people who are willing to adapt to soar to new heights. And it often leaves those who are unwilling to adapt feeling left behind and lost—as if they are missing out on something. And they are missing out on something. Today when it comes to communication—both one-on-one and to a mass audience—there are so many new tools available to us. I know you know what many of them are: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn.  At the 2015 Leadership Summit I’ll be talking about 11 different ways to engage with your customers that go beyond the phone. You’ll still use the phone. It will never die. But there are some great new ways to get your message heard. So join me on Tuesday, May 19th and get ready to celebrate the new life of new communication! For more on the 2015 Print Leadership Summit, May 18-19, 2015, in Minneapolis, MN, visit...

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How Printers Are Transforming: The Heritage Printing & Graphics Story

In the beginning, there were printers. Then as technologies and economies transformed, we emerged into a digital world as … printers. The point is that no matter how you describe your business today—a marketing service provider, packaging solutions firm, display graphics enterprise, etc.—we are all still printers, but how we got here brings us to sharing this transformation story… The 2015 Print Leadership Summit is the event for printers, by printers. In this blog series we will explore transformation stories of some of our most notable speakers, so you can discover fresh ways to reinvigorate your business. If you’ve ever wondered what it would be like to leave the strain of daily operations and get a fresh perspective, you’ll want to ready this story. Over the course of nearly four decades, Heritage Printing & Graphics, led by President and Co-Owner Joe Gass, has seen plenty of transition. Along the way Heritage has identified itself as a quick printer, then a commercial printer, and today with the addition of wide- and grand-format capabilities, a visual communication company. During this time Heritage has grown geographically from Leonardtown, Maryland, a suburb of Washington, DC, south to add a production facility in Charlotte, North Carolina. Here Joe tells his story of transformation. 1.   When did you decide you needed to make a change? I took the reins of the family business in 1988 after serving for six years in the United States Navy following high school. Heritage was pretty successful through the 90s, transitioning from a multi-location quick printer into a single location commercial printing and mailing company. We invested heavily in the late 90s in direct-to-plate technology and larger, faster 28-inch offset presses to focus our business more on process color publications, marketing materials, and direct mail. Then we, like many other printing businesses, were greatly impacted by the devastating economy that followed the tragic events of 9-11. Around 2003, as I was approaching the age of forty, I began to realize that being a leader with endless amounts of energy and determination was no longer good enough to sustain a profitable business. By that time our company had struggled with the poor economy and shrinking margins for a number of years, ultimately leading to a Chapter 11 reorganization and my own personal bankruptcy.  2.   What impact did this have on you? They were tough years—for our business and family–but ended up being the beginning of a great renewal that transformed me and totally changed the trajectory of my family and our business.  The financial challenges we faced during that time made me totally reconsider what was most important in life.  After seventeen years leading the business, I decided to...

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How Printers Are Transforming: The Heritage Printing & Graphics Story

In the beginning, there were printers. Then as technologies and economies transformed, we emerged into a digital world as … printers. The point is that no matter how you describe your business today—a marketing service provider, packaging solutions firm, display graphics enterprise, etc.—we are all still printers, but how we got here brings us to sharing this transformation story… The 2015 Print Leadership Summit is the event for printers, by printers. In this blog series we will explore transformation stories of some of our most notable speakers, so you can discover fresh ways to reinvigorate your business. If you’ve ever wondered what it would be like to leave the strain of daily operations and get a fresh perspective, you’ll want to ready this story. Over the course of nearly four decades, Heritage Printing & Graphics, led by President and Co-Owner Joe Gass, has seen plenty of transition. Along the way Heritage has identified itself as a quick printer, then a commercial printer, and today with the addition of wide- and grand-format capabilities, a visual communication company. During this time Heritage has grown geographically from Leonardtown, Maryland, a suburb of Washington, DC, south to add a production facility in Charlotte, North Carolina. Here Joe tells his story of transformation. 1.   When did you decide you needed to make a change? I took the reins of the family business in 1988 after serving for six years in the United States Navy following high school. Heritage was pretty successful through the 90s, transitioning from a multi-location quick printer into a single location commercial printing and mailing company. We invested heavily in the late 90s in direct-to-plate technology and larger, faster 28-inch offset presses to focus our business more on process color publications, marketing materials, and direct mail. Then we, like many other printing businesses, were greatly impacted by the devastating economy that followed the tragic events of 9-11. Around 2003, as I was approaching the age of forty, I began to realize that being a leader with endless amounts of energy and determination was no longer good enough to sustain a profitable business. By that time our company had struggled with the poor economy and shrinking margins for a number of years, ultimately leading to a Chapter 11 reorganization and my own personal bankruptcy.  2.   What impact did this have on you? They were tough years—for our business and family–but ended up being the beginning of a great renewal that transformed me and totally changed the trajectory of my family and our business.  The financial challenges we faced during that time made me totally reconsider what was most important in life.  After seventeen years leading the business, I decided to...

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