A Stellar
Comeback
ComGraphics
Inc. expands offerings, invests in technology and grows
its customer base.
BY PREETI
VASISHTHA
More by this author
When 9/11
happened in New York and Washington, D.C., ComGraphics
Inc. (CGI) felt the tremors in Chicago. The manufacturer
lost many clients in the financial industry, which was
hit hard by the event. “CGI lost many brokerage
accounts due to failed brokerages and mergers,”
says Denise K. Kretzer, company president and COO. The
company’s sales dropped from
$7 million in fiscal 2002 to $5.6 million in fiscal
2003.
That was a turning point for the company.
“We really took the losses we experienced and
analyzed,” Kretzer says. CGI primarily offered
statement processing to its clients in the finance industry.
“Statement processing is cyclical,” she
says. “We produced statements only at the beginning
of the month.” The company decided to expand its
customer base. “We started looking at industries
such as publishing, utility and manufacturing that did
invoice and statement processing jobs more frequently
and regularly throughout the month,” she says.
CGI also felt that to better meet its clients’
demands, it needed to invest in technology. “Our
clients pushed us,” Kretzer says. “The move
from paper to electronic is inevitable. We needed to
provide both hard copies and electronic versions of
the statements.” The company decided to offer
in-house computer processing and formatting; conversion
to HTML or PDF and online presentation; and secure hosting
of web-based statements.
By the
end of 2002, CGI earned the Women Business Enterprise
(WBE) Certification from the Women’s Business
Development Center and the Women’s Business Enterprise
National Council, allowing it to bid on government contracts
at local, state and national levels. The company also
became a DMIA member, expanding its network of distributors
and gaining work.
CGI diversified into invoice and statement printing,
direct mail, fulfillment services and expanded electronic
presentment services, including bill pay. The company’s
sales rose to $8 million in fiscal 2004, a 42.8 percent
increase from fiscal 2003. That’s the highest
increase for any firm on the Top 100 Manufacturers list
except for Ennis Inc., which grew 141.9 percent largely
because of its merger with Alstyle Apparel. (See “Success
That Doesn’t Wear Thin” on page 30.)
An Attitude That Propels Growth
CGI’s
culture plays a significant role in its growth. The
company looks at its 55 full-time and 30 part-time employees
as untapped resources for improvement. For instance,
CGI used input from employees with mailing experience
to find ways to mail cost-effectively. Many years ago,
CGI provided only microfiche services. It tapped into
the suggestions made by employees with experience in
software, and began offering document imaging, electronic
presentment and electronic bill pay services.
CGI revels
in its “can do” attitude. It almost never
tells customers, “No, we cannot do that,”
Kretzer says. The company receives numerous requests
from its clients to meet their demanding schedules.
“We rearrange our schedule and we take the extra
step to deliver,” she says. “Often, it makes
our lives difficult, but it sets us apart.”
Business Development Manager Bruce Turyna says, “We
do whatever is necessary to get the job done and get
it done right.” For instance, the employees looked
through 1,000 mail trays to find 10 statements its client
didn’t want mailed.
The company has always been driven by customer needs.
That’s also CGI’s strategic plan for fiscal
2005. “Clients continually ask us, ‘what
can you do to have our costs go down?’”
Kretzer says. The company’s strategy is to improve
its hardware and software to streamline clients’
processes and decrease costs. The company recently purchased
Dialogue advanced formatting software from Exstream
Software Inc., Lexington, Ky. Dialogue quickens production
time and consolidates statements, saving clients postage
and programming costs, Turyna says. The company also
is evaluating high-speed imagers to offer faster processing
times.
“If you service your customers’ needs, your
business grows,” Turyna says. “It grows
from within your established clients and beyond through
referrals. More than 70 percent of our new business
comes from referrals.”
One challenge
CGI faces is competing with bigger companies. “Most
large-sized clients want to deal with bigger companies,”
Kretzer says. “It’s a constant challenge
to prove yourself to a prospective large-sized client.
But sometimes, bigger isn’t better.”
Preeti
Vasishtha is assistant editor of Print Solutions. Email
her your comments at pvasishtha@PSDA.org.
Company:
ComGraphics Inc.
Headquarters:
Chicago
Founded:
1980
Principals:
Coralie M. Dwyer, owner and CEO; Denise K. Kretzer,
president and COO; Dawn M. Nagel, vice president and
CTO; Deborah L. Schreiber, secretary and treasurer
Employees:
85
Business
in Brief: CGI specializes in document design, composition,
printing, presorting and mailing for the financial,
publishing, utility and manufacturing industries. It
offers transactional digital printing such as financial
statements, confirms, invoice printing, direct mail
and customer loyalty programs, fulfillment and scanning/archiving,
and electronic presentment.
A Meteoric
Rise: 3 Tips
Post-9/11,
Chicago-based manufacturer ComGraphics Inc.’s
(CGI) sales dropped from $7 million in fiscal 2002 to
$5.6 million in fiscal 2003. Undaunted by its losses,
the company performed a self-analysis and experienced
a 42.8 percent growth in fiscal 2004. Here are three
tips on growth from the company:
1. Analyze your product offerings and customer base.
Find out whether your company can gain customers in
other industries. CGI’s niche was the financial
industry, but the company realized it could offer invoice
and statement processing to the publishing, utility
and manufacturing industries, too.
2. Expand your company’s reach. To bid on government
contracts at local, state and national levels, CGI earned
in late 2002 the Women Business Enterprise (WBE) Certification
from the Women’s Business Development Center and
the Women’s Business Enterprise National Council.
To expand its network of distributors, the company became
a DMIA member.
3. Realize that customer is king. CGI always has been
driven by customers’ needs. Its strategy for fiscal
2005 is to improve its hardware and software to meet
clients’ demands for streamlined processes and
decreased costs. The company recently purchased Dialogue
advanced formatting software from Exstream Software
Inc., Lexington, Ky. Dialogue quickens production time
and consolidates statements, saving clients postage
and programming costs. The company also is evaluating
high-speed imagers to offer faster processing times.