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Against the grain

April 2008 - Posts

  • Stick your hand out... or stick your hand-out?

    Print institutions across the country are suffering from undercapacity at their sites. “No, really?” drips your sarcastic reply. But I’m not talking about the shopfloors where staff spend their working lives, but rather the places they end up once their days at sharp end of a printing press are done.

    I was gobsmacked to read on printweek.com that the Printers’ Charitable Corporation (PCC) has recorded a deficit because of undercapacity at one of its nursing homes. Am I the only one who finds this strange, especially in this, the age of the pension-deficit crunch? According to the Office of National Statistics, six out of 10 people of working age are not contributing to a private pension scheme, and things are not getting any better.

    Listen carefully and you can actually hear the age of retirement making a Doppler effect as it disappears into the distance.

    Printers, it seems, are just not that fond of hand-outs. In the same printweek.com story, the PCC said a measly 2% of its aid for victims of last summer’s floods had been claimed. Is this testament to the industry’s proud, battling-on nature, or are printers martyrs without a cause?

    One thing that has long been overcapacity in the Printing World towers has been doom and gloom about the difficulties facing the industry. For some problems, there is the occasional respite: the rising euro could see work migrate back from the continent; the steady stream of shutdowns is putting more work back on the market and so on But as quickly as one dark cloud lifts, there is the crack of thunder on the horizon.

    So don’t let a stiff upper lip stop you from taking advantage of small mercies, like charitable aid or somewhere to rest your weary bones after decades at the press face.
  • Finding meaning in the dreaded 'T' word

    The world turns and words turn with it. In archaic English, ‘let’ meant 'to hinder or delay', a polar opposite of its modern definition and one that only hits home when a tennis ball hits the net. The moniker ‘geek’, aimed at derided outcasts in the days of the pocket calculator and ZX Spectrum, is now worn as a badge of honour by the post-millennium iPod generation. Language evolves. Meanings change.


    So when did ‘training’ become a dirty word?

    For the May issue of Printing World, we’re talking to the industry’s training advocates. And what they say is at odds with printers’ trepidation to embrace the dreaded ‘T’ word. Forget skilling up purely for skilling up’s sake – for those fighting the training corner, it’s all about benefits to your business, often quantified by frank financial facts. Surely detractors can be wooed when training is defined in terms of the bottom line? Vision in Print’s Richard Gray says a third of the 230 courses it has run can be measured monetarily, and the average added value for those programmes is £128,000 in year one.

    Better yet, Gray said the programmes also offer a 10 for one payback in the first year. How many printers are so overcapacity that a machine investment, even to clear the most stubborn bottleneck, could provide a 1,000% return on investment in just 12 months?

    We’ll also look at how Polestar has not only embraced training, but pushed the boundaries, moving training out of the classroom and the shopfloor and into the ether of the internet. Students from its Print Dynamics programme don’t lug around heavy textbooks – all the coursework is stored on an iPod that fits snugly in the pocket.

    Critics might point out that for every mp3 player loaded with information, there’s one less unit on an educational book printer’s order book. I’d say that’s a small price to pay if the workers of tomorrow have a handle on making print more profitable.