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Articles
What is a print
broker and what do they do?
In much the same way that
other commodities can be brokered (insurance,
mortgages, pensions etc.), so too can print: that's
what print brokers or managers do.
They act as an out-sourced
sales solution to their trade-only suppliers. Those
suppliers maintain low overheads by - among other means
- not employing dedicated sales staff of their own:
they out-source sales on a part-time basis to print
management companies. Those companies then represent a
"collective" of printers, who together offer a complete
printing solution.
Traditionally, you'd buy
business cards from one supplier, brochures from
another and large-format graphics from yet another. To
free up their resources and save them having to shop
around, many customers employ companies do it for them:
all in one place.
For
example?
As well as providing a
one-stop solution, management companies are used for
many other things:
A complex project, which
would normally involve several suppliers with different
areas of expertise? Free up your resources to
concentrate on that project and out-source the printing
to a service provider.
Exhibiting at a show or
fair? Similarly, concentrate on the logistics and leave
the printing of business cards, exhibition graphics and
stands, leaflets and flyers to a Brokerage.
Print brokers
don't have any printing presses?
No. They are management
companies, utilising the varied and diverse equipment
of their equally varied and diverse supplier base.
they're just like a huge print company which can
produce anything that their customers require: they
represent the entire industry.
The industry is so varied
and diverse that no individual printer could hope to
serve the entire market competitively. They'd have down
time on their presses and so on. Print brokers take a
number of trade-only suppliers, with diverse equipment
able to serve the whole market, package it up and bring
it to the market as a complete solution.
Is this a new
market niche?
Print brokers and managers
have been around for a while. In fact, some of the most
successful companies in the industry don't have any
presses of their own.
How can a print
manager or broker be the cheapest, quickest and most
environmentally friendly, as they often
claim?
They scour the market for
their customers to get the best deal. They make sure
that each project is produced on the most appropriate
equipment and because they have a wide ranging supplier
base, they have access to just about any printing press
you'd care to think of. No individual printing company
would be able to address every printing need but
brokers can, through their diverse supply chain. They
keep prices down by using trade-only suppliers and
maintaining low overheads of their own. Their extensive
supply base means that they can always find the right
supplier for the job: this benefits their suppliers by
making a contribution to their overhead and it benefits
their customers because of the reduced rates which they
are able to acquire printing for.
Often though, a customer
requirement will be very specialised or time-sensitive.
In these instances, price is not necessarily the
primary concern.
In these instances, a
print broker's customers will approach them because
they don't know where else to go. They could undertake
a lengthy search for the most appropriate suppliers but
to free up their resources, they employ a management
firm. As well as a general print management service,
these companies are able to offer a service wherein
their supply base allows them to provide pretty much
anything, any time. They're print managers and exist as
an out-sourced procurement service to their
customers.
Who are print
managers' customers?
Their customers include
individuals, members of the public, sole traders,
small, medium and large companies; government
departments, local authorities and charities.
In any case - whether sole
trader or multi-national corporation - each of their
customers are equally important to them and customers
use print managers or brokers for the service which an
out-sourced supplier can provide in procuring their
printing.
How do print
brokers make money?
As a business, a print
broking company naturally needs to remain a profitable
concern. They maintain low overheads by not having
their own printing equipment, among other means. They
procure goods on behalf of their customers through
trade-only suppliers who have low overheads themselves:
they don't employ sales staff (they out-source that
operation to management companies) and they occupy
premises in geographical areas where business rates are
competitive (typically out-of-town).
Print brokers apply a
modest margin to their trade purchasing prices and
their prices to the end-line user are representative of
those which their customers would find in the
commercial market; often less so. A managed or brokered
printing service is value-added and a print manger or
broker's diverse supplier base allows them to be a
one-stop solution to their customers, saving those
customers the cost and resource of employing a
dedicated buyer.
Who are a print
broker's competitors?
Commercial printers and
High Street-based print shops. Neither do what the
other does but print management companies offer what
both do and more besides. A print broker's managed
print solution means that they can offer their
competitors' services in one basket; often at a reduced
cost.
How can print
management companies be better than traditional
printers?
Many traditional print
companies try to offer the one-stop solution which
print brokers do but they have higher overheads.
Therefore, all non-core business which they outsource
will come at a premium. They also don't have the
resources to have researched their non-core business
market thoroughly enough, nor usually sufficient staff
to offer the level of service which a dedicated
management company offers on out-sourced work. Print
managers and brokers are dedicated to a constant
awareness of the market and the changes therein, to
consistently offer their customers the best printing
solution.
Because they out-source
all of their customers' projects, the print broker's
internal resources are free to manage their customers'
printing for them.
Why don't
customers deal directly with a management company's
suppliers?
Because print brokers'
suppliers only deal with the trade (managers and
brokers). If they were to deal directly with customers,
they would need to employ sales staff and incur the
salaries and indirect costs associated therewith. They
can't justify such an expense with their individual,
specific offerings, so they out-source their sales on a
part-time basis to print brokers, along with other
suppliers offering different goods and services.
Why wouldn't a
print broker's suppliers approach a customer
directly?
Because they don't have
dedicated sales people and employ printing management
companies in that function. From a print manager or
broker's point of view, if any of their suppliers were
to adopt such a practice, they would deny themselves
the other leads which might otherwise be introduced to
them.
Who is responsible
for "managed" printing?
The print management
company are: even though they're print managers -
middle men - the buck has to stop somewhere and as far
as the customer is concerned, that buck stops with the
service provider. Otherwise customers may as well deal
directly with the manager or broker's suppliers and for
reasons given above, they really don't want to do that.
Brokers provide a complete managed print service, which
extends to total responsibility for customers'
printing: they can approve proofs on-press, so that
customers don't have to; advise on pre-flighting
customer files and are ultimately responsible for their
customers' printing and all that's entailed
therein.
Why would a
customer deal with a broker and not a "traditional"
printing company?
Because print managers and
brokers represent a one-stop solution for all of a
customer's printing needs. Rather than shop around many
printers for the best deal and most appropriate
production medium, print brokers do that for their
customers.
London Print Brokers are a
Business Process Out-sourced complete print procurement
solution.
London Print Brokers act
as an out-sourced sales solution to trade-only
suppliers. Those suppliers maintain low overheads by -
among other means - not employing dedicated sales staff
of their own: they out-source sales on a part-time
basis to London Print Brokers. London Print Brokers
then represent a "collective" of printers, who together
offer a complete print solution.
Traditionally, print
buyers would buy - for example - business cards from
one supplier, brochures from another and large-format
graphics from yet another. To free up their customers'
resources and save them having to shop around, London
Print Brokers do it for them: all in one place.
As well as providing a
one-stop managed print solution, London Print Brokers'
customers use them for many other things:
A complex project, which
would normally involve several suppliers with different
areas of expertise for printing, for example: customers
can free up their resources to concentrate on that
project and out-source the printing to London Print
Brokers.
If a customer is
exhibiting at a show or fair, they can concentrate on
the logistics and leave the printing of business cards,
exhibition graphics and stands, leaflets and flyers to
London Print Brokers.
The print industry is so
varied and diverse that no individual print company
could hope to serve the entire market competitively.
They'd have down time on their presses and so on.
London Print Brokers have taken a number of trade-only
print companies, with diverse equipment able to serve
the whole market, packaged in up and brought it to the
market as a one-stop managed print solution.
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