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Home » Industry News

Industry News

Printing Charity to use North Print & Pack to up regional influence

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Printing Charity to use North Print & Pack to up regional influence

Chief executive Stephen Gilbert explained that the charity was seeking to raise awareness of the work it does across the whole country, but that Yorkshire was a key locality because of the size of the print industry in the region. He said: “Once upon a time, the charity had a network of auxiliaries across the whole country and the organisation in Yorkshire used to be very strong. We’d like to get back to that level of engagement and support. “This event will provide an ideal networking opportunity for us to showcase the charity as part of our drive to substantially increase the number of people we help year-on-year.” The Printing Charity will be exhibiting on stand C120. North Print & Pack runs from 14 to 16 May and is being held at the Harrogate International...

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Cross-media integration the key theme at IPIA conference

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Cross-media integration the key theme at IPIA conference

The association has lined up speakers from across sectors to headline its annual conference on 19 June in Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire. The event is followed by a glamorous awards ceremony. “The conference, called Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick, will look at how companies can successfully integrate cross media into their business,” said a spokesman for the event, which is also run with IPIA’s annual general meeting. Resource sales and marketing director Asif Choudry will tell the conference about the challenges he had to tackle to move from a print-only business 10 years ago to a company that now blends virtually all cross-media services. IPIA chief executive Andrew Pearce said: “There’s a lot of talk about cross media but I want delegates to fully understand what it means, and to be fully aware if it’s viable for them to pursue it. “If you are a business forms printer, do you continue with that niche and hope more people drop out or do you think about offering cross-media services? For print buyers who understand what they are doing it is not such a huge investment to embrace it because they can look for partners.” Pearce added: “Each year we aim to deliver a theme that is really ‘of the moment’ and this year’s event is for any business looking to use cross media to gain sales for themselves and their clients.” CVG Papier business development manager Ad Sies will look at how digital print can add value to the cross-media mix. Digital media expert Nigel Dacre will look at multiplatform delivery through print, websites, mobile phones, tablets and TV. Dacre said: “The days when printing was the only form of communication are clearly over but clever organisations are still using a wide range of methods and print is still a crucial means of communication.” Other speakers include Andy Rafferty, client partner at marketing company Brightsource, who will look at the role of print in multi-channel marketing. Media entrepreneur Sarah Hughes will talk on using social media as a sales tool. Last year’s event attracted over 100 people such as printers, print managers, marketers, print buyers, machinery manufacturers and trade associates. This year’s gathering is at Puckrup Hall Hotel. The IPIA annual awards, presented on the evening of the conference, will include gongs for best trade manufacturer, print manager, associate member and individual personality of the year. Guest speaker is actor Shaun Williamson. Visit www.ipia.org.uk, call 0844 90 20 214 or email: info@ipia.org.uk...

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Forum targets printers with free credit control package

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Forum targets printers with free credit control package

The guide, available now to download for free, combines the forum’s existing credit control guide, which has advice on managing bad debt, negotiating better payment terms and invoice templates, with a guide created by finance experts that explains what can be done to improve a business’ credit rating and how to present to a lender to secure a loan. Of the FPB’s circa-18,500 members a few hundred are currently print companies and the Forum’s Robert Downes said it had identified the sector as one of the worst affected by late payments and cash flow problems. As such he said the guide was being targeted at printers first and if its reception was a success the FPB would look at other sectors that could particularly benefit. He added: “We recognise that the print industry is under pressure and that it is one of the most impacted by late or slow payments. “We’re fairly sure our guide can help some printers bring these payment times down a bit and give them a good steer for future contracts.” Forum member Steve Swinyard, who until last year ran Stockport print firm JS Dutton with his son, backed the new guide and said that late payers and bad debts had almost crippled his firm. “Printers are always going to have problems with people that can’t pay and people that won’t pay. You can work with the ones that can’t, which is where this kind of advice comes in handy and is something that we could do with more of. “On the other hand if people just won’t pay I somethimes think it is more effective to do it the old fashioned way and pay them a visit. Small printers simply don’t have the time to be chasing paperwork and going through court after court. That’s what can close people down. The right advice in the first place could help avoid all that altogether though,” he added. According to Downes improving credit rating was another key factor for SMEs to address in order to improve their chances of being accepted for business loans. “All the banks look at credit scores before making a decision on credit, from overdraft to full blown loan, and if they get a whiff of a risk they won’t like it,” he added. He explained that a major cause of rejected loan applications was that too many business owners were unprepared and did not carry out enough research often due to lack of resources or not knowing where to look. He added: “We know that there are already a lot of guides out there that will give you the official information you need when it comes to applying for finance. But many of them do little more than send you off in different directions to gather the knowledge you need. Our guide has it all in one place.”...

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Forum targets printers with free credit control package

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Forum targets printers with free credit control package

The guide, available now to download for free, combines the forum’s existing credit control guide, which has advice on managing bad debt, negotiating better payment terms and invoice templates, with a guide created by finance experts that explains what can be done to improve a business’ credit rating and how to present to a lender to secure a loan. Of the FPB’s circa-18,500 members a few hundred are currently print companies and the Forum’s Robert Downes said it had identified the sector as one of the worst affected by late payments and cash flow problems. As such he said the guide was being targeted at printers first and if its reception was a success the FPB would look at other sectors that could particularly benefit. He added: “We recognise that the print industry is under pressure and that it is one of the most impacted by late or slow payments. “We’re fairly sure our guide can help some printers bring these payment times down a bit and give them a good steer for future contracts.” Forum member Steve Swinyard, who until last year ran Stockport print firm JS Dutton with his son, backed the new guide and said that late payers and bad debts had almost crippled his firm. “Printers are always going to have problems with people that can’t pay and people that won’t pay. You can work with the ones that can’t, which is where this kind of advice comes in handy and is something that we could do with more of. “On the other hand if people just won’t pay I somethimes think it is more effective to do it the old fashioned way and pay them a visit. Small printers simply don’t have the time to be chasing paperwork and going through court after court. That’s what can close people down. The right advice in the first place could help avoid all that altogether though,” he added. According to Downes improving credit rating was another key factor for SMEs to address in order to improve their chances of being accepted for business loans. “All the banks look at credit scores before making a decision on credit, from overdraft to full blown loan, and if they get a whiff of a risk they won’t like it,” he added. He explained that a major cause of rejected loan applications was that too many business owners were unprepared and did not carry out enough research often due to lack of resources or not knowing where to look. He added: “We know that there are already a lot of guides out there that will give you the official information you need when it comes to applying for finance. But many of them do little more than send you off in different directions to gather the knowledge you need. Our guide has it all in one place.”...

read more

Cross-media integration the key theme at IPIA conference

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Cross-media integration the key theme at IPIA conference

The association has lined up speakers from across sectors to headline its annual conference on 19 June in Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire. The event is followed by a glamorous awards ceremony. “The conference, called Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick, will look at how companies can successfully integrate cross media into their business,” said a spokesman for the event, which is also run with IPIA’s annual general meeting. Resource sales and marketing director Asif Choudry will tell the conference about the challenges he had to tackle to move from a print-only business 10 years ago to a company that now blends virtually all cross-media services. IPIA chief executive Andrew Pearce said: “There’s a lot of talk about cross media but I want delegates to fully understand what it means, and to be fully aware if it’s viable for them to pursue it. “If you are a business forms printer, do you continue with that niche and hope more people drop out or do you think about offering cross-media services? For print buyers who understand what they are doing it is not such a huge investment to embrace it because they can look for partners.” Pearce added: “Each year we aim to deliver a theme that is really ‘of the moment’ and this year’s event is for any business looking to use cross media to gain sales for themselves and their clients.” CVG Papier business development manager Ad Sies will look at how digital print can add value to the cross-media mix. Digital media expert Nigel Dacre will look at multiplatform delivery through print, websites, mobile phones, tablets and TV. Dacre said: “The days when printing was the only form of communication are clearly over but clever organisations are still using a wide range of methods and print is still a crucial means of communication.” Other speakers include Andy Rafferty, client partner at marketing company Brightsource, who will look at the role of print in multi-channel marketing. Media entrepreneur Sarah Hughes will talk on using social media as a sales tool. Last year’s event attracted over 100 people such as printers, print managers, marketers, print buyers, machinery manufacturers and trade associates. This year’s gathering is at Puckrup Hall Hotel. The IPIA annual awards, presented on the evening of the conference, will include gongs for best trade manufacturer, print manager, associate member and individual personality of the year. Guest speaker is actor Shaun Williamson. Visit www.ipia.org.uk, call 0844 90 20 214 or email: info@ipia.org.uk...

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Beautiful printing is now more than its own reward

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Beautiful printing is now more than its own reward

There’s something magical about an expertly designed and beautifully crafted book. No longer simply the sum of its parts and a practical means of conveying information, such a product has real impact and real power over just what that impact might be. Kraszna-Krausz Book AwardsWinner: Best Photography Book War/Photography: images of armed conflict and its aftermathAnne Wilkes Tucker, Will Michels and Natalie Zest (Yale University Press), printed by SYL Printers War/Photography is based on a photography exhibition that opened at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas. Images were found in military, museum, press and photographer agency archives and range from daguerreotypes documenting the Crimean and American Civil Wars to digital images made by soldiers in 21st-century Iraq. Electing this as winner was a unanimous decision, reports chair of the photography book panel and photography specialist and curator, Zelda Cheatle. The book’s win was mainly down to its fresh and insightful approach to its subject matter, but the quality of its design and print execution certainly played a big part, she explains. “It is beautifully printed. Some of the images are Russian war photographs so the negatives of the print were in very bad shape to begin with so it wouldn’t have been an easy job,” she says. How it was printed The book was printed by SYL Group, a 100-staff, high-end book printer based in Barcelona. It was printed on a B1 Heidelberg Speedmaster, on 150gsm Hello silk, and bound in-house.This paper stock was chosen, explains author of the book Anne Wilkes Tucker, to convey its serious and important subject matter. “We wanted a book that people could pick up repeatedly and would stand that kind of repeated handling, yet we also wanted a good paper stock,” she says. “We wanted it to feel like a book that is for reference, not just pretty.” The stock used was also key in making the book easy to handle, as was the quality of its binding. “The paper is not too white and has a very good weight,” says Cheatle. “Because it’s such a big book, if it had been a heavier paper it would be more difficult to handle, and yet you don’t feel like there’s any bleedthrough and it has a weight and solemnity appropriate for the topic. Quite often a big book isn’t easy to read; you’ve got to sit at a table and do it properly. But with this book it’s just about possible to sit on the sofa and have it on your lap and that is very well thought through.” Wilkes Tucker adds that quality binding is also often crucial to a book attracting a browser’s attention in a book shop crowded with other titles: “In a store, if you’re lucky the cover is out, but if you’re unlucky, it’s just the binding. We wanted both to be strong so people would feel inclined to pick it up.” Concerning the print quality of the images inside, Barbara Sadick, US sales rep at SYL explains that converting all files to CMYK was key to faithfully reproducing photos: “The challenge was that these were different images taken by different photographers at different times, so you want the book to look cohesive, at the same time as maintaining the integrity of each image,” she says. “I think...

read more

Beautiful printing is now more than its own reward

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Beautiful printing is now more than its own reward

There’s something magical about an expertly designed and beautifully crafted book. No longer simply the sum of its parts and a practical means of conveying information, such a product has real impact and real power over just what that impact might be. Kraszna-Krausz Book AwardsWinner: Best Photography Book War/Photography: images of armed conflict and its aftermathAnne Wilkes Tucker, Will Michels and Natalie Zest (Yale University Press), printed by SYL Printers War/Photography is based on a photography exhibition that opened at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas. Images were found in military, museum, press and photographer agency archives and range from daguerreotypes documenting the Crimean and American Civil Wars to digital images made by soldiers in 21st-century Iraq. Electing this as winner was a unanimous decision, reports chair of the photography book panel and photography specialist and curator, Zelda Cheatle. The book’s win was mainly down to its fresh and insightful approach to its subject matter, but the quality of its design and print execution certainly played a big part, she explains. “It is beautifully printed. Some of the images are Russian war photographs so the negatives of the print were in very bad shape to begin with so it wouldn’t have been an easy job,” she says. How it was printed The book was printed by SYL Group, a 100-staff, high-end book printer based in Barcelona. It was printed on a B1 Heidelberg Speedmaster, on 150gsm Hello silk, and bound in-house.This paper stock was chosen, explains author of the book Anne Wilkes Tucker, to convey its serious and important subject matter. “We wanted a book that people could pick up repeatedly and would stand that kind of repeated handling, yet we also wanted a good paper stock,” she says. “We wanted it to feel like a book that is for reference, not just pretty.” The stock used was also key in making the book easy to handle, as was the quality of its binding. “The paper is not too white and has a very good weight,” says Cheatle. “Because it’s such a big book, if it had been a heavier paper it would be more difficult to handle, and yet you don’t feel like there’s any bleedthrough and it has a weight and solemnity appropriate for the topic. Quite often a big book isn’t easy to read; you’ve got to sit at a table and do it properly. But with this book it’s just about possible to sit on the sofa and have it on your lap and that is very well thought through.” Wilkes Tucker adds that quality binding is also often crucial to a book attracting a browser’s attention in a book shop crowded with other titles: “In a store, if you’re lucky the cover is out, but if you’re unlucky, it’s just the binding. We wanted both to be strong so people would feel inclined to pick it up.” Concerning the print quality of the images inside, Barbara Sadick, US sales rep at SYL explains that converting all files to CMYK was key to faithfully reproducing photos: “The challenge was that these were different images taken by different photographers at different times, so you want the book to look cohesive, at the same time as maintaining the integrity of each image,” she says. “I think...

read more

Thatcher coverage boosts April daily newspaper figures

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Thatcher coverage boosts April daily newspaper figures

According to Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) figures for April 2013, The Guardian recorded the biggest upturn with a 1.15% month-on-month increase to 196,034 followed by The Times and The Telegraph with modest increases of 0.76% and 0.69% respectively. Among the tabloids circulation uplift was not so evident although The Daily Mirror achieved a month-on-month growth in figures of almost 1%. Despite the majority of weekday editions achieving at least a small circulation boost, evidently attributable to coverage of Thatcher’s death, there were still those that lost readers. Surprisingly Tory-title The Daily Mail lost 1% of its usual monthly circulation, while among the quality broadsheets The Financial Times had a 2.5% drop in circulation. Year-on-year figures, albeit buoyed slightly, continued their overall decline. Not one weekday tabloid experienced growth, with overall decline in the sector of 10.7%, compared to last year, to 4.6m. Among the quality weekday titles decline in year-on-year circulation continued as well, albeit at a slower pace than last year, with overall decline of 3.7%. Gains were made by The Times, which achieved 1.6% year-on-year growth to 393,167, and The Independent‘s successful sister title i, which once again grew circulation with a 12% increase to 271,648....

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Thatcher coverage boosts April daily newspaper figures

Posted by Print Week News on May 13, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Thatcher coverage boosts April daily newspaper figures

According to Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) figures for April 2013, The Guardian recorded the biggest upturn with a 1.15% month-on-month increase to 196,034 followed by The Times and The Telegraph with modest increases of 0.76% and 0.69% respectively. Among the tabloids circulation uplift was not so evident although The Daily Mirror achieved a month-on-month growth in figures of almost 1%. Despite the majority of weekday editions achieving at least a small circulation boost, evidently attributable to coverage of Thatcher’s death, there were still those that lost readers. Surprisingly Tory-title The Daily Mail lost 1% of its usual monthly circulation, while among the quality broadsheets The Financial Times had a 2.5% drop in circulation. Year-on-year figures, albeit buoyed slightly, continued their overall decline. Not one weekday tabloid experienced growth, with overall decline in the sector of 10.7%, compared to last year, to 4.6m. Among the quality weekday titles decline in year-on-year circulation continued as well, albeit at a slower pace than last year, with overall decline of 3.7%. Gains were made by The Times, which achieved 1.6% year-on-year growth to 393,167, and The Independent‘s successful sister title i, which once again grew circulation with a 12% increase to 271,648....

read more

Rollem Hosts 2013 Finishing Technology Showcase in Anaheim, CA

Posted by Printing Impressions Binding & Finishing News on May 10, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Rollem Hosts 2013 Finishing Technology Showcase in Anaheim, CA

ANAHEIM, CA—May 10, 2013—Rollem International is pleased to announce its upcoming Finishing Technology Showcase scheduled for June 18-19, 2013 in its Anaheim, CA showroom.   This event will focus on cross-over solutions for…

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