Print Solutions October 2006
president’s message
By TIMOTHY J. MEHL, CDC
Time Moves Fast
It seems like yesterday that I was
preparing for my incoming president’s address at our 2005
annual meeting in Orlando. I remember one thing about that
address very clearly—I was scared to death. Since then,
I’ve traveled throughout the country, attending every
DMIA event. I’ve renewed friendships, met lots of great
people and enjoyed the experience immensely. Thank you for
giving me this opportunity.
During my incoming president’s
address, I suggested that the biggest barrier to DMIA’s
growth is the lack of a distinct identity. Since then,
we’ve gotten a lot of input from the membership. The
association’s staff and the board have spent a lot of
time on this issue, and we’ve developed a new strategic
plan for the next three years. The plan’s objectives
include the following:
Establish a Clear Identity that
Differentiates DMIA in the Marketplace. This includes a name
change for the association, as well as a total re-branding
initiative.
Redesign Trade Show Models. Our trade
shows, including the TRADEMarts and Print Solutions Expo, are
being revamped to more effectively connect manufacturers and
distributors. The goal is to ensure maximum value for
exhibitors and attendees. You saw this at the 2006 Print
Solutions Expo, and you’ll see significant changes to the
2007 TRADE Mart series.
Develop a New Association Financial Model.
To keep the association vibrant, we’ll need new revenue
streams to complement dues, media and events income.
Yes, it’s been a fast year.
I’ve learned a lot, gained a lot and enjoyed every
minute. I want to thank Peter Colaianni and the DMIA Staff for
their efforts during the past year. I want to thank the Board
of Directors for its support. I especially want to thank my
brother Joe Mehl for doing all the heavy lifting at our
company, Dispatch, while I attended to DMIA business.
But mostly I want to thank Jim Riley for
agreeing to be DMIA’s 2006-2007 president. Jim will be an
excellent DMIA president. His skill sets are uniquely qualified
as we continue to develop a new identity and re-brand this
association. With Jim’s leadership and collaborative
style, I’m confident that the board and staff will
successfully implement the strategic plan.
As time passes quickly for me and DMIA,
it’s also moving quickly for you. Our marketplace is
changing faster than ever. In the future, print will be
procured online. Much of that print will be template based.
Order and production workflows for print will be even more
automated. And finally, print will be used in conjunction with
other media so we’ll need to integrate print with other
multimedia solutions.
There is no other association better
positioned than DMIA to help guide you through this change.
Take advantage of your membership to “Create the
Opportunity.”
Most of my monthly columns during the past
year were authored by other members who described how they
created opportunities in their businesses. I want to thank all
of the members who wrote these columns. This last column, by
Bill English of Superior Business Solutions, Kalamazoo, Mich.,
is particularly poignant. Bill is a former DMIA Board Member
and is always an active participant at DMIA meetings.
Bill speaks to branding—relevant to you and your
association.
Timothy J. Mehl, CDC, is CEO of Dispatch, a
manufacturer in Erie, Pa., and DMIA’s president.
CREATING SUPERIOR BRANDS BY BILL ENGLISH,
CFC
I’ve been in this industry for 29
years, and “the talk” as far back as I can remember
inevitably turned to the end of paper. But we sold more paper
every year during my first 19 years, and the notion of
paperless businesses seemed light years away. In the last 10,
emerging information technology and diminishing demand for
traditional forms design and printing told quite another story.
Almost overnight, we found ourselves
reinventing and repositioning our company. We created a new
business model and changed our 70-plus years corporate brand
identity from Superior Business Forms to Superior Business
Solutions. We transformed our forms design and management
expertise, utilizing the same technology that was killing off
the forms industry. With the convergence of desktop publishing
and high-speed copying, we introduced on-demand print and
“stockless inventory.” We made just-in-time
delivery, flat-cost structures and zero obsolescence our sales
mantra. Encountering opportunities that didn’t fit the
on-demand model, we added commercial print sales (not without
some painful lessons), forging commercial
manufacturer/distributor relationships.
While traditional suppliers struggled to
revive the forms business, the Internet brought us e-commerce
and—depending your business model—either
insurmountable challenges or unimaginable opportunities. We
entered this arena early, with the belief that adding value was
the proper role for this technology. We quickly found ourselves
leading with value-added e-commerce platforms—providing
common interfaces for ordering, facilitating artwork
generation, supporting efficient workflows and approvals, and
ensuring brand enforcement.
We soon saw the need for Superior to brand
e-commerce separately. We used multiple platforms to satisfy
individual customer requirements and didn’t want to
confuse customers with all the interface names. We didn’t
want the risks associated with third-party e-commerce service
providers. And we didn’t want competitors to easily
identify which interfaces we used so they could imitate our
proprietary solutions. So we began marketing our e-commerce
products under the Corporate Kiosk brand. In the end, our
clients know and trust our brand—not supplier brands. The
client relationship remains with us. And we still fill our
traditional role in the channel by sourcing the proper products
to the proper vendors.
New software packages created the ability
to dynamically assemble entire documents on the fly with
database information: changing graphics, text, and the page
count on entire documents, and integrating e-commerce
capabilities. We saw another opportunity, realizing that few
players in the printing industry really understood and added
variable data printing (VDP) as a product extension to
on-demand printing. Our strategy: Control the technology that
produces images. Many manufactures own the “boxes”
that produce VDP pieces, but can’t handle the software,
hardware and web front-end.
Frankly, it was a tough sell because VDP
was new. We spent more time than we would have liked educating
clients and looking for problems they didn’t know they
had. Selling the concept to long-term customers proved most
difficult. They still associated Superior with the guys who
sold forms. We even found ourselves re-educating our staff!
Once again, we looked to branding for solutions and created the
Scope1 brand.
We’ve invested heavily in branding
Superior Business Solutions, Corporate Kiosk, and Scope1.
Repositioning Superior Business from Forms to Solutions
broadened corporate perceptions of scope of services. Corporate
Kiosk branding got us audiences with prospects who previously
pegged Superior as a forms supplier and wouldn’t give us
the time of day. Branding Scope 1 helped us get the traction we
needed to define our brand, gain internal alignment with our
own people, and market it properly to customers. I’m
convinced it’s why we’re still in business and
growing.
Bill English, CFC, is president of
distributorship Superior Business Solutions, Kalamazoo, Mich.