Mabeg Feeders
Navigation Menu
  • Home
  • Parts Info
    • Feeder Parts
    • Sheeter Parts
    • Spiess Parts
  • Request Parts
    • Feeder Parts Quote
    • Sheeter Parts Quote
  • Buy Parts
  • Service
    • Head Rebuild
  • New Products
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Home » Printing News

Printing News

Warwick Printing Company to install UK’s first Speedmaster SX 102

Posted by Print Week News on May 16, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Warwick Printing Company to install UK’s first Speedmaster SX 102

The new eight-colour B1 long perfector is due to be installed in July at the Leamington Spa base. The company has increased turnover by 125% to £5.6m in four years and almost doubled staff headcount to 65. Sales manager Paul Baxter said: “Predominantly we are a magazine printer and do long runs, but this new investment will give us the opportunity to look at other markets on the commercial side, maybe government work, education, high-end agency work. We might also look to work with print management companies.” Currently the firm operates two Speedmaster SM102-8-P presses and an SM74-4+L. One of the SM102s and the SM74 will be replaced to help give the company more productivity and flexibility. Managing director John Young said: “We can’t afford not to buy now. It will give us the ability to produce to the prices that the market demands today. It was the speed of makeready on the new SX 102 that was convincing. “Currently it is about 45 minutes on our SM 102s. But on the new press, it will be just 15 minutes. So as we average 420 eight-unit plate changes per month we will create over 200 hours capacity each month. “In addition we will use 100 sheets less per make-ready which equates to a saving of £30,000 in paper costs per year and the 80% improvement in running speed will give a significant benefit to productivity.” Finance for the press was arranged with Société Génerale through Bespoke Asset Finance. In total, including add-ons and internal preparations, the company spent about £2m. Young’s wife Gillian is company secretary while sons Alan and Paul work in prepress and customer services...

read more

Deltor moves into B2 with £2m spend

Posted by Print Week News on May 16, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Deltor moves into B2 with £2m spend

“We’ve made the investment because run lengths and speed of turnaround dictated that we had to have a mid-sized offset press,” said Alan Shannon, who runs the Cornwall company with his wife Caroline and son Sam. Sales director Sam Shannon said: “We wanted to be a bit more competitive in short-run work such as jackets, and will use an existing B1 Roland 700 perfector for longer-run stuff. So we decided to go with the smaller-format Komori.” The 37-staff company spent £2m on the 16,000soh machine, which is being installed this week, as well as changes to the facility in Saltash to house the kit. “We are impressed with Komori and feel as a medium-sized printer, the company is very supportive,” said Sam Shannon, whose print team makes £3m turnover from clients including Government groups and universities. Typical jobs include leaflets and council-tax booklets, and he said Deltor Communications was keen to strengthen what it did. New kit purchases aimed to make the business run “quicker rather than bigger”, he added. The Lithrone will run alcohol free, which ties in with the company’s environmental drive. Shannon said Deltor Communications was to reduce carbon emissions by installing a 20kW solar-panel electricity system on the roof of the depot. This will reduce electricity bills by 40% even with the new Komori running, he...

read more

UPDATED: St Ives hits the acquisition trail again

Posted by Print Week News on May 16, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on UPDATED: St Ives hits the acquisition trail again

The group has acquired London and Leeds-based search engine optimisation and digital marketing agency Branded3 Search for an initial £10.7m, £8.6m in cash and 1.4m in newly issued shares. However, additional performance related payments over the next three years could result in a further £14.3m being paid. The 50-staff business operates in B2B and B2C markets with clients including Ann Summers, BMW, Heinz, HSBC, McDonald’s, Microsoft, More Than, Orange, Sky and Vue Cinemas. In the year ending 31 January 2013 it generated sales of £4.1m and a EBITDA of £1.7m before one-off items. This latest deal matches the £25m St Ives spent on digital marketing agency Amaze in March and follows similar deals for companies such as marketing research and insight agency Incite in 2012 and retailer and consumer consultancy Pragma Holdings in 2011. In line with previous acquisitions, the business will operate as a subsidiary of St Ives from its existing locations and the founders of Branded3, chief executive Vin Chinnaraja and director of search Patrick Altoft, will continue to lead the business. St Ives chief executive Patrick Martell said the deal would add “significant depth” to its marketing services offering. “Our combination of insight led innovation and trusted execution across digital and physical media creates a unique integrated offering in the market, which this acquisition complements well,” he said in a statement. Chinnaraja added: “We have achieved another major milestone in our growth plans and becoming part of a synergistic, forward-thinking group where there is huge potential for collaboration is a real boost for us. I am really looking forward to working with the St Ives team to fulfil our ambitious plans.” Speaking to PrintWeek, Martell said that there were no plans to merge the various recently acquired marketing services businesses or create a single group identity. “There are some overlaps, but we absolutely haven’t bought these businesses to put them together for synergy benefits. We bought them because of what they are and what they do, we’ll invest in them, we’ll run them separately, but encourage them to collaborate where there are opportunities,” said Martell. “With all of the businesses that we’ve acquired the brand is with the division, not with St Ives. They’re all their own brands, they all have their own brand strengths. We’re buying businesses that are either leaders in their markets, or have the potential to be. All have the ‘scale’ which is attractive to us.” According to Martell, the company has looked at more than140 businesses since it embarked on its strategy to grow its marketing services operation. He added that further acquisitions could be on the horizon. “We’ve said that we wanted to get non print to 40% of our operating profit as our first phase, and we’re pretty much there now. The next phase will be a combination of organic growth and possibly international expansion of those marketing services businesses and further acquisitions.”...

read more

Deltor moves into B2 with £2m spend

Posted by Print Week News on May 16, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Deltor moves into B2 with £2m spend

“We’ve made the investment because run lengths and speed of turnaround dictated that we had to have a mid-sized offset press,” said Alan Shannon, who runs the Cornwall company with his wife Caroline and son Sam. Sales director Sam Shannon said: “We wanted to be a bit more competitive in short-run work such as jackets, and will use an existing B1 Roland 700 perfector for longer-run stuff. So we decided to go with the smaller-format Komori.” The 37-staff company spent £2m on the 16,000soh machine, which is being installed this week, as well as changes to the facility in Saltash to house the kit. “We are impressed with Komori and feel as a medium-sized printer, the company is very supportive,” said Sam Shannon, whose print team makes £3m turnover from clients including Government groups and universities. Typical jobs include leaflets and council-tax booklets, and he said Deltor Communications was keen to strengthen what it did. New kit purchases aimed to make the business run “quicker rather than bigger”, he added. The Lithrone will run alcohol free, which ties in with the company’s environmental drive. Shannon said Deltor Communications was to reduce carbon emissions by installing a 20kW solar-panel electricity system on the roof of the depot. This will reduce electricity bills by 40% even with the new Komori running, he...

read more

UPDATED: St Ives hits the acquisition trail again

Posted by Print Week News on May 16, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on UPDATED: St Ives hits the acquisition trail again

The group has acquired London and Leeds-based search engine optimisation and digital marketing agency Branded3 Search for an initial £10.7m, £8.6m in cash and 1.4m in newly issued shares. However, additional performance related payments over the next three years could result in a further £14.3m being paid. The 50-staff business operates in B2B and B2C markets with clients including Ann Summers, BMW, Heinz, HSBC, McDonald’s, Microsoft, More Than, Orange, Sky and Vue Cinemas. In the year ending 31 January 2013 it generated sales of £4.1m and a EBITDA of £1.7m before one-off items. This latest deal matches the £25m St Ives spent on digital marketing agency Amaze in March and follows similar deals for companies such as marketing research and insight agency Incite in 2012 and retailer and consumer consultancy Pragma Holdings in 2011. In line with previous acquisitions, the business will operate as a subsidiary of St Ives from its existing locations and the founders of Branded3, chief executive Vin Chinnaraja and director of search Patrick Altoft, will continue to lead the business. St Ives chief executive Patrick Martell said the deal would add “significant depth” to its marketing services offering. “Our combination of insight led innovation and trusted execution across digital and physical media creates a unique integrated offering in the market, which this acquisition complements well,” he said in a statement. Chinnaraja added: “We have achieved another major milestone in our growth plans and becoming part of a synergistic, forward-thinking group where there is huge potential for collaboration is a real boost for us. I am really looking forward to working with the St Ives team to fulfil our ambitious plans.” Speaking to PrintWeek, Martell said that there were no plans to merge the various recently acquired marketing services businesses or create a single group identity. “There are some overlaps, but we absolutely haven’t bought these businesses to put them together for synergy benefits. We bought them because of what they are and what they do, we’ll invest in them, we’ll run them separately, but encourage them to collaborate where there are opportunities,” said Martell. “With all of the businesses that we’ve acquired the brand is with the division, not with St Ives. They’re all their own brands, they all have their own brand strengths. We’re buying businesses that are either leaders in their markets, or have the potential to be. All have the ‘scale’ which is attractive to us.” According to Martell, the company has looked at more than140 businesses since it embarked on its strategy to grow its marketing services operation. He added that further acquisitions could be on the horizon. “We’ve said that we wanted to get non print to 40% of our operating profit as our first phase, and we’re pretty much there now. The next phase will be a combination of organic growth and possibly international expansion of those marketing services businesses and further acquisitions.”...

read more

Printoff Graphic Arts boosts business under new MD

Posted by Print Week News on May 15, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Printoff Graphic Arts boosts business under new MD

The company based in Nelson, Lancashire, scooped a three-year contract to supply Bolton Council and international aviation suppliers NetJets with their printed materials. The framework deal for Bolton will involve litho and digital work for promotional material for leisure and tourism activities such as Bolton Food Festival, said Cleaver. The contract is worth around £1.5m over six lots. The 35-year old company uses B2 five- and six-colour Roland presses and Océ digital equipment. It offers data-management services and full finishing including folding, laminating, stitching and wire binding. The 22-staff firm makes £2m turnover and clients include social-housing groups and private-sector names such as Hoseasons Group. The second contract, for 12 months, is for a safety news magazine for NetJets, which will go out five times a year in runs of around 2,000. Printoff will also handle occasional jobs for the client including calendars and return cards. “This is a busy and exciting time,” Cleaver said. “During late 2012 we made a decision to realign the business and integrated latest print technologies. Online proofing solutions and digital print underpin our core full colour print B2 capabilities.” Prior to taking up here role in January Cleaver was managing director of partner company Concept4, a digital and traditional marketing business, also based in Nelson, with clients in education, health, commercial and public sectors. She is now managing director of both companies and replaces Brian Hough who has left the firm....

read more

Printoff Graphic Arts boosts business under new MD

Posted by Print Week News on May 15, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Printoff Graphic Arts boosts business under new MD

The company based in Nelson, Lancashire, scooped a three-year contract to supply Bolton Council and international aviation suppliers NetJets with their printed materials. The framework deal for Bolton will involve litho and digital work for promotional material for leisure and tourism activities such as Bolton Food Festival, said Cleaver. The contract is worth around £1.5m over six lots. The 35-year old company uses B2 five- and six-colour Roland presses and Océ digital equipment. It offers data-management services and full finishing including folding, laminating, stitching and wire binding. The 22-staff firm makes £2m turnover and clients include social-housing groups and private-sector names such as Hoseasons Group. The second contract, for 12 months, is for a safety news magazine for NetJets, which will go out five times a year in runs of around 2,000. Printoff will also handle occasional jobs for the client including calendars and return cards. “This is a busy and exciting time,” Cleaver said. “During late 2012 we made a decision to realign the business and integrated latest print technologies. Online proofing solutions and digital print underpin our core full colour print B2 capabilities.” Prior to taking up here role in January Cleaver was managing director of partner company Concept4, a digital and traditional marketing business, also based in Nelson, with clients in education, health, commercial and public sectors. She is now managing director of both companies and replaces Brian Hough who has left the firm....

read more

Standard Bank contract a "monster job" for BMC

Posted by Print Week News on May 15, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Standard Bank contract a "monster job" for BMC

The South Africa-based bank chose the London-based company in a competitive tender and has charged BMC with completely overhauling document management based on a “next-generation” storage and archiving facility. This will be a huge job, said a spokesman for BMC, although the value of the contract was not disclosed. Standard Bank Group claims to be the largest African bank in assets and earnings, operating in 17 countries on the African continent and 13 countries outside Africa. Total assets are worth $203bn. BMC said with the remit of the bank growing, the contract would “be on a grand scale.” The new system will encompass the complete document life cycle; from physical management, capture of content, indexing, secure storage and easy retrieval, right through to secure destruction. BMC will provide an onsite librarian to manage the archive. It will also provide three on-site DTP operators to help produce presentation documents and look after digital assets. The service is due to be rolled out across the whole bank. BMC managing director Catherine Burke said: “We’ll be putting in place systems and processes, across the whole document life-cycle, which will be truly state-of-the-art, including presentation services and storage and archiving.” She added: “It’s a monster job and a big challenge, bringing together different service lines, which will involve a little bit of inspiration and no doubt perspiration. I can’t disclose its worth, but the deal makes Standard Bank one of our most significant customers. It’s a very important piece of business. “All organisations like ours use similar types of scanning and storage technology, although we will tailor elements to the client’s needs. It’s about combining the right software and hardware with the right people that have the right processes.” Standard Bank head of corporate services Ruth Hansen said: “The project is on a large scale, quality is at a premium, and it is essential new solutions don’t compromise continuity. We therefore needed a supplier to bring us bang up-to-date. “It must deliver against stringent industry compliance standards and best practices. BMC will ensure seamless implementation of new systems and transform our document management and DTP processes in terms of speed, accuracy and efficiency.” This is the latest in a series of high-profile, lucrative wins for BMC. Last October is signed a three-year contract for marketing print and warehouse services for pension firm Friends Life and a year ago it won a £10m document-management deal from insurer Hastings Direct. BMC, which was born out of AccessPlus and the former BPO arm of The Print Factory, was acquired by Office2office five years...

read more

Standard Bank contract a "monster job" for BMC

Posted by Print Week News on May 15, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Standard Bank contract a "monster job" for BMC

The South Africa-based bank chose the London-based company in a competitive tender and has charged BMC with completely overhauling document management based on a “next-generation” storage and archiving facility. This will be a huge job, said a spokesman for BMC, although the value of the contract was not disclosed. Standard Bank Group claims to be the largest African bank in assets and earnings, operating in 17 countries on the African continent and 13 countries outside Africa. Total assets are worth $203bn. BMC said with the remit of the bank growing, the contract would “be on a grand scale.” The new system will encompass the complete document life cycle; from physical management, capture of content, indexing, secure storage and easy retrieval, right through to secure destruction. BMC will provide an onsite librarian to manage the archive. It will also provide three on-site DTP operators to help produce presentation documents and look after digital assets. The service is due to be rolled out across the whole bank. BMC managing director Catherine Burke said: “We’ll be putting in place systems and processes, across the whole document life-cycle, which will be truly state-of-the-art, including presentation services and storage and archiving.” She added: “It’s a monster job and a big challenge, bringing together different service lines, which will involve a little bit of inspiration and no doubt perspiration. I can’t disclose its worth, but the deal makes Standard Bank one of our most significant customers. It’s a very important piece of business. “All organisations like ours use similar types of scanning and storage technology, although we will tailor elements to the client’s needs. It’s about combining the right software and hardware with the right people that have the right processes.” Standard Bank head of corporate services Ruth Hansen said: “The project is on a large scale, quality is at a premium, and it is essential new solutions don’t compromise continuity. We therefore needed a supplier to bring us bang up-to-date. “It must deliver against stringent industry compliance standards and best practices. BMC will ensure seamless implementation of new systems and transform our document management and DTP processes in terms of speed, accuracy and efficiency.” This is the latest in a series of high-profile, lucrative wins for BMC. Last October is signed a three-year contract for marketing print and warehouse services for pension firm Friends Life and a year ago it won a £10m document-management deal from insurer Hastings Direct. BMC, which was born out of AccessPlus and the former BPO arm of The Print Factory, was acquired by Office2office five years...

read more

BMC contract win will bring Standard Bank "bang up to date"

Posted by Print Week News on May 15, 2013 in Uncategorized | Comments Off on BMC contract win will bring Standard Bank "bang up to date"

The South Africa-based bank chose the London-based company in a competitive tender and has charged BMC with completely overhauling document management based on a “next-generation” storage and archiving facility. This will be a huge job, said a spokesman for BMC, although the value of the contract was not disclosed. Standard Bank Group claims to be the largest African bank in assets and earnings, operating in 17 countries on the African continent and 13 countries outside Africa. Total assets are worth $203bn. BMC said with the remit of the bank growing, the contract would “be on a grand scale.” The new system will encompass the complete document life cycle; from physical management, capture of content, indexing, secure storage and easy retrieval, right through to secure destruction. BMC will provide an onsite librarian to manage the archive. It will also provide three on-site DTP operators to help produce presentation documents and look after digital assets. The service is due to be rolled out across the whole bank. BMC managing director Catherine Burke said: “We’ll be putting in place systems and processes, across the whole document life-cycle, which will be truly state-of-the-art, including presentation services and storage and archiving.” She added: “It’s a monster job and a big challenge, bringing together different service lines, which will involve a little bit of inspiration and no doubt perspiration. I can’t disclose its worth, but the deal makes Standard Bank one of our most significant customers. It’s a very important piece of business. “All organisations like ours use similar types of scanning and storage technology, although we will tailor elements to the client’s needs. It’s about combining the right software and hardware with the right people that have the right processes.” Standard Bank head of corporate services Ruth Hansen said: “The project is on a large scale, quality is at a premium, and it is essential new solutions don’t compromise continuity. We therefore needed a supplier to bring us bang up-to-date. “It must deliver against stringent industry compliance standards and best practices. BMC will ensure seamless implementation of new systems and transform our document management and DTP processes in terms of speed, accuracy and efficiency.” This is the latest in a series of high-profile, lucrative wins for BMC. Last October is signed a three-year contract for marketing print and warehouse services for pension firm Friends Life and a year ago it won a £10m document-management deal from insurer Hastings Direct. BMC, which was born out of AccessPlus and the former BPO arm of The Print Factory, was acquired by Office2office five years...

read more
Page 213 of 250« First«...102030...211212213214215...220230240...»Last »

Designed by Elegant Themes | Powered by WordPress