“We were drowning in reprints.” That’s how the production manager at a large North American retail chain—let’s call them a close cousin of Walgreens—described their custom poster printing operation to me over the phone. They’d been running their in-store signage program on a mix of aging digital presses and offset backups, and the results were, frankly, all over the place. Colors drifted between runs. Jobs piled up during peak seasons. And every month, they were throwing away about 15% of what they printed.
That’s when someone on their team suggested they look into Staples printing. Not for the usual office stuff—but for the heavy lifting. “We just assumed big retail printing needed a commercial shop,” he told me. “But Staples same day printing for our seasonal posters? That seemed like a stretch.”
Fast forward six months. Their waste rate dropped to under 5%. Their turnaround time for poster printing at Staples went from “it depends” to “by tomorrow afternoon.” And they finally stopped having to explain to store managers why the “50% Off” sign was a different shade of red than last week’s.
The Client's World Before We Met
The client operated about 1,200 stores across the Midwest and Southeast. Each location needed roughly 40-60 posters per week—sale announcements, seasonal promotions, new product launches. Nothing exotic, nothing ultra-high resolution. Just consistent, decent-quality custom poster printing that store managers could trust.
But trust was in short supply. Their internal print shop—a team of 17 folks running two HP Indigo 10000s and a pair of old flexo lines—was doing its best. But they were fighting against a dozen variables: different paper stocks from three suppliers, seasonal humidity swings (especially in the Midwest summer), and an IT system that logged job specs on a spreadsheet. The result? A first-pass yield of about 68% on any given week. That’s not a typo. More than 30% of what they printed ended up in the recycling bin or needed a reprint.
“I remember one Tuesday,” the plant manager told me, “we had 14 reprints queued up before lunch. All because the yellow ink density drifted between Monday night and Tuesday morning.” That kind of inconsistency wasn’t just expensive—it was eroding morale. The prepress team would check files, the press operators would tweak settings, but the color shift kept happening. They needed a different approach.
The Real Challenge Wasn't What They Thought It Was
When our team from Staples printing first sat down with them, everyone assumed the problem was hardware. “We need newer presses,” the production director said. “Faster ones. With better color automation.” And sure, new equipment would help. But as we dug into their workflow, a different pattern emerged.
The real bottleneck wasn’t the press speed—it was the prepress hand-off. Their designers would create posters in a mix of Adobe Illustrator, Canva, and even PowerPoint (yes, really). Then they’d save files in different color spaces—some in sRGB, some in CMYK, a few in a weird hybrid that one designer had been using since 2019. The prepress team would open each file, guess the original intent, and manually adjust. On a good day, that took 20 minutes per job. On a bad day, it took an hour—and they’d still miss the target.
Here’s where it gets interesting. The client had been researching how to resize an image for poster printing because their staff kept getting it wrong. They’d upload a 300 DPI file but export it at 72 DPI for email—then the print version would look fuzzy. We realized that before we could fix the press, we had to fix the input. So we built a simple, 10-step prepress checklist that every file had to pass before it touched a plate. No exceptions. The first month, designers hated it. The second month, they started seeing fewer reprints. By month three, nobody complained.
The Numbers That Actually Mattered
Let’s talk about the data that made the finance team sit up. Their baseline waste rate was around 15% of total output. After implementing the new file-preparation workflow and switching their primary poster printing at Staples to a standardized UV digital workflow, that number dropped to 4.7% within four months. That’s about 1,200 fewer wasted posters per week across the chain.
But the more telling metric was color consistency. We measured ΔE across 50 consecutive poster runs before and after the change. Before: an average ΔE of 4.2, with one run hitting 7.8 (which is pretty bad for retail signage). After: average ΔE of 1.8, with no single run exceeding 2.3. For context, 2.0 is generally considered the limit of what the human eye can detect in a side-by-side comparison. In practical terms, that meant the “Sale” red now looked the same in Chicago and Miami—even though those stores had completely different lighting conditions.
Now, I’ll be honest: it wasn’t all perfect. We tried to move them to a fully automated color management system, but the cost of upgrading their RIP software was higher than they wanted to commit to in the first year. So we compromised. We kept their existing RIP but added a manual color verification step that added about 8 minutes per job. It wasn’t the most elegant solution, but it worked. Sometimes the best option isn’t the high-tech one—it’s the one that gets implemented.
What We Learned and What We'd Do Differently
If I’m being completely honest, there are two things I’d change if we could start over. First, we underestimated how hard it would be to get designers to adopt the new file submission template. We created it in week two, but it took until week six for compliance to reach 80%. We should have built a simple automated validator that rejected non-compliant files at the submission stage. That would have saved us about three weeks of back-and-forth.
Second, the client asked about Walgreens poster printing as a potential alternative during the evaluation phase—they wanted to benchmark pricing and turnaround. It turned out that while the per-unit cost was similar, the turnaround guarantee was tighter with us because we could leverage Staples same day printing for urgent rush orders. That flexibility became a bigger selling point than we initially expected. In the end, they kept their in-house shop for standard runs but started funneling time-sensitive jobs through us.
So what’s the takeaway? Sometimes your biggest bottleneck isn’t the machine—it’s the hand-off between design and production. Fix that, and suddenly the press starts looking a lot faster. Staples printing helped them see that, and now their production manager uses a phrase I love: “We stopped fighting the press and started fixing the file.” That’s the kind of shift that sticks.