Print Sales

Are You Ready for Digital Production Specialty Inks?

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Those print providers with capabilities to produce high-quality CMYK plus fluorescent, white, gold, silver inks over the next 12 to 18 months will have a significant opportunity to capture increased margins and new business.

 As we continue to transition out of a Covid economy, printers are looking to expand their offerings. Adding specialty inks has allowed print providers to move more short-run projects from offset to digital.

 As always, the challenge is educating and marketing new capabilities to new and existing accounts. Many buyers and influencers currently do not know about the value of specialty inks.

 Those print suppliers who are engaging customers now will reap the rewards of a fast-growing market segment. Some of the samples and applications of special ink printing with an expanding complement of substrates we have seen are sensational. 

 Like any other new game-changing capability in printing, there is always a start-up curve.

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We have identified 19 readiness self-assessment areas for print providers who want to enter this market.  

 Organizational Readiness

  1. Documented Marketing Plan Created

  2.  Specialty Ink Opportunities Identified

  3.  Organization Adaptability

  4.  Ability to Execute

  5.  Growth Strategy

  6.  Organizational Alignment

  7.  Pricing

     Creative & Marketing Support Readiness

  8. Can Demonstrate Creativity and Innovation

  9. Cross Media and Variable Data Capabilities

  10. Creative Capabilities

  11. Specialty Ink Press Capabilities

  12. Operator Skills

  13. Specialty Ink Workflow Readiness

     Sales/Customer Service Readiness

  14. Sales Training

  15. Customer Communications Plan Developed

  16. Specialty Ink Value Proposition Developed

  17. Ability to Manage Customer Expectation

  18. Strategy to Influence Creatives

  19. Sales Compensation Aligned

 If you are planning to invest in digital equipment with specialty inks or are having start-up issues, feel free to let us know. We have a full range of training and Agency resources to support you.  Just send a note to Frank Kanonik at fkanonik@intellectives.com.

The Value of a Sales Relationship

Spending a many hours researching and writing about the transition taking place in B2B direct selling, I have found that the value of networking and relationships still remain paramount.  More than a few Decembers ago, I remember a specific deal where a relationship of my father-in-law helped me finish the year strongly.

After a promotion to a sales manager for a Manhattan-based team of savvy and seasoned pros, I was faced with a dilemma. My sales team was reluctant to share information about their prospects or bring me in to meet their large prospects. It seemed they were testing their new and young sales manager. At this time, members of my sales team were engaged in a very large sales opportunity at a prominent publishing company. Because of the size of the deal, it had high visibility in my company. My boss repeatedly quizzed me on the status of the prospect. An order here would immediately propel my sales team and me from mediocrity to stardom.

I understood we had a strong support and agreement from within the account. The barrier according to my salespeople was gaining agreement from a tough VP of Finance, a long-term employee who had a reputation akin to “Attila the Hun”.  Not only was my team terrified of him, but the account’s employees were as well. Nothing of significance was ever approved without a scrupulous and contentious review by this tyrannical VP. One member of my sales team suggested we wait until he retired.

Over a weekend, my retired father-in-law gave me an encouraging talk on his experiences dealing with tough decision makers. Years earlier as a printing salesman, he sold to the very same publishing company. He talked with great fondness about a print buyer who gave him his largest order. He viewed the order as a reward for persistence and professional selling.

Consequently, the buyer became his friend and they spend many hours together. My father-in-law described the buyer as a “wild man”. After his retirement, he lost track of the buyer. Upon hearing the man’s name, I was excited as I realized that his last name matched my invincible VP of Finance. The first name my father-in-law remembered was a nickname and was not the same as the formal first name we knew. We decided, given the disparity in first name and the apparent difference in personality, the man was probably not our VP of finance.

The year-end approached, we had our final meeting to defend our proposal and close the deal. I forced my reluctant sales team to bring me along. This was my first visit to the account. There wasn’t too much pressure, since no one expected us to win the deal. As I entered the conference room, I took a chance. I whispered my father-in-law’s name in the VP’s ear. The VP smiled broadly. He pulled me from the room and spent the next fifteen minutes asking about his old friend. As we re-entered, the meeting participants were stunned.

Although no one knew how I “broke the ice” with is reluctant buyer, we got the order. My sales team was impressed. I gained their confidence, and the VP and my father-in-law renewed their friendship.

Some things do not change. The value of relationships is very powerful.

Is Your Sales Approach Aligned

Many sellers of commercial products and services have missed a major shift in the buying process. There is enough anecdotal and survey research available that tell us that buyers are now more in control of the buying process than ever before.

Unfortunately many current “go to market” plans, marketing and direct sales training programs have not adjusted.

This is the era of customer initiated research and networking on almost all products and services. It was only a few years ago, where customers met with salespeople to gain vital product information to investigate solutions to problems and business opportunities.

What’s Changed

Simply, buyers go to web to research projects and network with colleagues and associates before they engage a salesperson. Some estimate that more than 50% of the buying process is completed before the salesperson is engaged.

Who Will be Driving the Direct Mail Bus

Most agree that data-driven, personalized print is not only feasible but drives better results than traditional static print communications.  Consequently, for commercial printers, there exists an emerging opportunity for new customers and revenue streams driven by direct mail solutions.

Who will drive the bus?

Who Will Drive the Direct Mail Bus

The key question now will be who will take the lead in informing and attracting customers to direct mail. Will Commercial Printers, Marketing Services Providers, Digital Agencies or Data Management Companies meet with customers and explain the value of direct mail as part of an overall marketing mix? Or, will new decision and supplier models change the way we have traditionally created and marketed direct mail campaigns