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Tuesday, September 21, 2004

GraphExpo 2004: CIM, JDF, and Digital Applications for Commercial Print


Originally appeared in On Demand Journal

By Chuck Gehman


Why does the industry flock to Chicago every year? It’s not because of the food at McCormick Place, (although it might be the Steaks on Rush Street!) It’s primarily to learn about new technologies and how they can be used to make printing a more profitable business. This year, GraphExpo will not disappoint.


State-of-the-art Automation

Even if you went to the “JDF Drupa” this last May, you will definitely see advancements in Computer Integrated Manufacturing (CIM) at the Chicago show. Pundits can be heard saying that Printers went to Drupa earlier this year to investigate, and are coming to GraphExpo to buy. JDF will be everywhere at the show, and many vendors will have JDF-enabled products that can be purchased today. JDF enables CIM, and they are both about saving time and making people more productive. You will be able to see the benefits in real interoperability demonstrations on the show floor, between vendor partners and even between companies who might be considered competitors.


Don’t Miss Events and Programs

Even if you make your first run at the show floor on Sunday, don’t miss The Research and Engineering Council of the NAPL’s Critical Trends in Printing Technology Breakfast. It’s Monday morning at 7:30AM, right at McCormick, room #S100C. Industry experts will give you insight into what to look for in the following areas:

  • Prepublishing and Workflow Trends
  • Digital Smart Factory
  • Digital Color Proofing
  • Processless Printing Plates
  • Digital Presses and Imaging
  • Sheetfed Presses and Auxiliaries
  • Web Presses and Auxiliaries
  • Bindery Integration and Automation
  • Fulfillment and Mailing Services
  • Converting Trends and Issues
  • Bill Lamparter’s “Must See ‘Ems”


If you are only interested in a couple of these topics, the breakfast is still well worth attending. It’ll save you hours of time on the show floor. It’s also a charitable event, in that 50% of the profits from breakfast are contributed to the Print and Graphics Scholarship fund. Contact NAPL, www.napl.org.


JDF Activities

CIP4 (The International Cooperation for the Integration of Processes in Prepress, Press and Postpress, www.cip4.org), the group that brings you JDF, is holding two fact-filled seminars at GraphExpo in Chicago, on Tuesday, October 8th. The seminars are open to all GraphExpo exhibition attendees at no additional charge. They will be held in Room N229, located in the North Building, Level 2, McCormick Place.


The first seminar is called “What is CIP4's JDF and how can it help my print workflow?” is targeted at printing company owners and managers wanting to make sense of all the hype around JDF. A panel of experts from leading industry companies will answer questions about JDF’s practical benefits to workflow. This seminar will be held from 1:00pm to 3:50pm. Speakers include: John Sweeney (CIP4 Finance Officer, GMI), James Harvey (CIP4 Director, Media4theWorld, President), Margaret Motamed (CIP4 Marketing Officer, EFI Director of Product Planning), Tim Daisy (Creo), Jonathan Cape (Vio President), Albert Such (HP), Koen Van De Poel (Agfa), Christian Anschütz (Heidelberg), Gareth O'Brien (ObjectiveAdvantage, Inc.Vice President), Heiner Schilling, (MAN Roland), and Chris Ries (ScenicSoft).

The second seminar is targeted at technical people who are developing JDF applications and features a technical panel and updates on the status of CIP4's JDF initiatives. Topics will include a summary of JDF 1.1 updates, and PPML with JDF support. This seminar will be held from 4:00 pm to 5:00pm. Speakers include: Rainer Prosi (CIP4 Chief Technical Officer, Heidelberg), Dave deBronkart (PODI), Doug Belkofer (EFI Senior Principal Scientist, Integration) and Tom Cabanski (ObjectiveAdvantage, President). Bring your technical questions for this panel.

JDF Pavilion


This year, for the first time, GraphExpo is hosting a JDF Pavilion, similar to the highly successful JDF Parc at Drupa. There will be 18 stations, where attendees can actually see the exchange of complete information from one piece of equipment control software to another, thus enabling the equipment being controlled to instantly share complete information about the file and the entire print job, from quantity, to specification, to cost to delivery information. This transmission between unassociated pieces of equipment is just one aspect of the use of JDF that provides advantages to printing plants.

At this writing, the JDF Pavilion has stations representing Adobe, Agfa, Creo, Dalim, EFI, Global Graphics, Group Logic, Heidelberg, LinoTechnics, Müller Martini, Prism, Screen, VIO and Wam!Net.

JDF Tours


In addition to the pavilion, there will be JDF-enabled solutions being shown in numerous booths across the show floor. "JDF Roadmaps" listing company locations and the JDF-enabled products that they are demonstrating will be available. CIP4 will also offer four free morning and afternoon JDF Show Floor Tours leaving from the JDF Pavilion, each with a specific focus and tour stops. GraphExpo attendees may register for the JDF Show Floor tours at: http://www.cip4.org/activities/graphexpo2004/tour_registration.php.


Digital Printing Applications

A key area that continues to garner strong interest from commercial printers is Digital printing and On Demand technologies and applications. GraphExpo is the optimal venue to get an understanding for what Digital printing technologies are available, and specifically how they will fit into a traditional offset printing environment. There might be other shows and conferences that are better for “strictly digital” applications, but if you are a commercial printer getting started or expanding a digital operation, this is the show for you. You are going to want to see new machines like the Kodak Versamark running fully variable pages at 2000ppm. Variable Data Printing (VDP) applications will be everywhere. Check out machines from Xerox driven by EFI Fiery. Enovation’s booth should be a key stop on your tour of the show, because they will be showing most of what a commercial printer needs for both offset and digital workflows in a single booth.


Mailing and Fulfillment

Value-added services have been the recipient of almost as much hype as CIM and JDF. What they have in common is an outstanding ability to boost a printing company’s bottom line. Mailing and Fulfillment can also grow revenue, by helping to get more business from existing customers and attracting larger new accounts. There’s a mailing and fulfillment center at the show that includes a theater with free sessions focused on topics like USPS regulations, ink jet addressing technology, data processing, “intelligent mail”, “repositionable note technologies” and more. You’ll find mailing and fulfillment technologies and software everywhere on the show floor.


EFI at GraphExpo

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention what my company, EFI, is going to be showing at GraphExpo. EFI will be a highlight of the JDF Pavilion and tours, if I may presume. In our booth, we’ll be showing ways that Computer Integrated Manufacturing can be applied to printing operations, from the smallest to the largest without wholesale replacement of existing capital investments.


We’ll be demonstrating new Fiery servers and technologies driving new digital output engines, and next-generation workflow technologies embodied in our new OneFlow 2.0 Workflow solution including new hybrid screening. You’ll see state-of-the-art inkjet color proofing with the brand new EFI ColorProof XF products, new versions of our PrinterSite, Digital StoreFront and PrintSmith Site Internet applications (including new PDF generating drivers and web-enabled VDP solutions). Last but not least, you’ll want to visit the benefits of new versions of our venerable Hagen, Logic, PSI and PrintSmith Print MIS systems, as well as new warehousing and mailing solutions that integrate with them.


Summary

GraphExpo promises to be as exciting and fun as it always is, and according to the show company, well attended, too. I don’t have to remind you to wear comfortable shoes, and plan ahead to maximize your time. Compared to Drupa, GraphExpo should be a “walk in the park”, but no less exciting!

Sunday, August 1, 2004

An introduction to Hybrid Workflows for Offset and Digital Production


Originally appeared in GATFWorld magazine

August 2004

By Chuck Gehman

Print production workflow is one of the most important topics in the industry today. The reason is simple: increasing the efficiency of preproduction processes is one of the most accessible, lowest-cost ways to improve overall profitability.

Further, streamlined workflows hold the key to enabling printing operations to offer value-added services. Streamlined print production workflow has been proven to decrease the labor-intensive processes associated with getting files ready to print—freeing up staff to perform activities that add value or enhance customer relationships. In a more direct way, new workflows can provide the ability for a printing company to offer new services. These are the things that are driving the need for Hybrid workflows.

Whether a printing operation is large or small, there is an increasing desire to supplement one type of printing technology with another. In a large commercial print operation, it might make sense to add a digital capability to be able to support shorter runs. In a small printing operation, there may be a desire to move into more sophisticated, higher quality products by adding CTP and a small offset press.

Whether the desire is to expand market share, or to increase capabilities and reach in an existing market, there are several challenges inherent in adding a new and different printing technology to an existing operation. In this article, we’ll focus on workflow technologies and the challenges and opportunities that exist for shops attempting to make this type of transition.

Today, most operations that have both offset and digital printing technologies employ two distinctly different workflow for the two types of work. And, many printing operations even employ different business systems to estimate, quote, track and invoice digital vs. offset jobs.

This is becoming increasingly cumbersome: internally, because for profitability and efficiency we shouldn’t have two sets of employees processing jobs; and externally, as the volume of work that combines the two technologies increases—print buyers don’t want to see two types of invoices, one for digital and one for offset work; and they shouldn’t have to understand two distinct technical processes from the same print vendor.

Applications for Hybrid Workflows

Before we talk about the basics of implementing a hybrid workflow, let’s look at some of the applications.

Short Run Printing
One of the first applications that commercial printers gravitate toward when adding digital is the ability to produce shorter runs for existing commercial print customers. An example would be a four-color brochure that you will print for a financial services customer to announce a new insurance plan to their agents. You’ve won the bid for an offset production run of 5,000 brochures, and promised delivery within three weeks. With their annual convention approaching in only one week, you offer the customer 500 of the brochures in two days.

This is a simple addition: to begin to produce these products, you simply have to “fingerprint” your digital printing equipment to match your offset equipment. Many large corporations now have elaborate and extensive approval sign-offs. Having the ability to produce 20 or so copies of a print product using digital, as “approval” proofs, has proven to be a successful customer service tool for early adopters of digital print in the commercial world.

Mailing and Fulfillment
Another application growing in importance for commercial print is mailing and fulfillment. Even before the advent of the national “Do Not Call” list, direct mail volume has been growing. Direct mail pieces today often include several components today:

• Envelope
• Letter
• Brochure
• Coupon or Invitation
• Response Card

In the past a commercial printer might only print the brochure (in this example, just one of four possibly product opportunities in the overall promotional package), and the rest of the job would be produced by a mailing house or an on-demand printer. Commercial printers are discovering that by adding the digital printing capabilities, and the mailing capabilities, they can grow margins and provide one-stop service, helping to lock-in customers and generate more volume from existing accounts.

Transactional Printing
It has long been a practice of many companies to include newsletters and other promotional materials in the same envelope with their billing statements; another example might be additional product offers included with quarterly financial reports (for example, from the financial institution that manages your retirement account). In the past, the newsletter component has been a commercial print staple, and the actual statement of account or financial report was produced digitally, as separate, stand-alone pieces.

Savvy marketers are realizing that if the newsletter or other promotional content is incorporated in the same printed piece as the actual transactional data, the response rates improve dramatically. Often these products are produced with a “shell” printed offset with high production values, then personalized to the individual recipient with relevant content and their transactional data.

Catalogs
The catalog market has arguably never been more robust, but there’s great competition for the customer’s mindshare. Catalog marketers are looking for value-add from their printers to help differentiate their offers from the competition. Personalization, beyond the now-ubiquitous inkjet addressing and tiny “dot matrix” offers on the back of the book next to the address, represent a great opportunity for additional revenue and print buyer satisfaction. Personalization today might include whole pages in the catalog, or customized, glossy “cover wraps” printed digitally using new high speed devices like the Kodak Versamark VX series driven by the EFI Fiery Controller.

Wide Format, Point-of-Sale
Increasingly, these applications are being produced using digital technologies, and are yet another area for value-add for commercial printers. Register cards, hangers for display on shelves in stores, or in refrigerators, window posters, posters for bus shelters, and many more applications are being created with wide-format output devices.

These types of jobs often include some components that are produced using more “traditional” printing technologies: i.e., for a restaurant franchise, the tray liners or menus might be produced offset, while region-specific window posters may be produced digitally. Internet ordering and fulfillment are also becoming increasingly important components of this type of work.


SIDEBAR: Workflow Terms

Controller, Color Server or Digital Front End (DFE)
A computer that drives a digital output device, or digital printer, like the EFI Fiery. DFE is a somewhat archaic term, most vendors preferring to use the more modern terms Controller or Color Server. These machines take input files in postscript or PDF, and send them to an output device (like a color copier). More recently, these machines contain sophisticated digital production workflow functionality.

Digital Workflow (Offset)
Often used to describe the software, equipment and processes used by commercial printers to perform the operations necessary to prepare digital files to image film or plates for use on offset presses.

Digital Production Workflow
In contrast to “Digital Workflow”, used in the digital printing market to describe the unique workflow steps and capabilities of systems designed specifically for preparing and managing jobs destined for digital printing.

Hybrid Workflow
A single workflow system that lets an operator work on, and manage jobs destined for either or both of offset printing (i.e., Computer-to-Plate), or for digital printing.

JDF Job Definition Format
An XML-based industry standard designed and created by consortium of more than 200 companies collaborating (www.cip4.org) to simplify information exchange among different graphic arts applications and systems, including Web-based systems, production systems and finishing systems. To that end JDF builds on and extends beyond preexisting partial solutions such as CIP3’s Print Production Format (PPF) and Adobe Systems Incorporated’s Portable Job Ticket Format (PJTF)). It also enables integration of business and planning applications into the technical workflow.

PDF (Portable Document Format)
A cross-platform, object-oriented, file format. Invented by Adobe Systems, PDF has become the defacto standard in the graphic arts industry for job exchange and processing.

PPML (Personalized Print Markup Language,)
An XML-based language for variable data printing. Developed by PODi (www.podi.org), PPML makes variable data jobs print faster by allowing a printer to store text elements and graphic elements and reuse them as
needed. PPML is a non-vendor-specific language and is therefore considered to be
an open industry standard.

Print MIS (Management Information System)
A system used to manage the business of operating a print production operation, including accounting, estimating, job costing and production planning and scheduling.

RIP (Raster Image Process)
A computer that takes input from a workflow system, and converts it into a format that can be used to drive an output device.

Workflow
The execution of, and the interaction between, the various steps and processes within a graphic arts production environment.





Why do we need Hybrid Workflow?
Workflow today, with a few notable exceptions, comes in two distinct flavors: those designed for offset, and those designed for digital. In the past, this worked well because jobs were printed using one production technology or the other. Most digital production was done in either another facility within a printing company, or at another company as a subcontractor.

Today, with these more complex applications we’ve discussed and jobs coming in that are destined to be produced using more than one printing technology, as well as with multiple printing technologies under one roof, this approach is quickly becoming inefficient.

And, with the advent of high-volume production-class digital printing equipment, like the Xerox iGen3, capable of running an average monthly print volume of 400,000 letter-size impressions at 60% coverage, with a total cost of ownership (TCO) at 6.8 cents per page, including supplies, service, and equipment, digital is starting to make sense for many jobs that were once economically practical to be produced only on offset presses.

Goals of Offset Workflow
Many of the workflow systems and practices in use today in commercial print have evolved over time from manual processes employed to make film and burn plates for offset production. Many small printing operations don’t actually employ a workflow solution from a major vendor—job processing consists of skilled employees using off-the-shelf software applications to prepare jobs, which are then sent to a RIP and ultimately output onto film or plate.

Many of the processes used to move jobs from the customer through pre-production job prep, to output to film or to plate via CTP, are unique to offset production workflow. However, some processes are common across offset and digital production.

A typical offset workflow might include the following steps, with specialized software (often included in a complete workflow system) to support each process:

• File Conversion (i.e., to PDF)
• Color Space Conversions (i.e, images from RGB to CMYK)
• Preflight
• Color Management
• Proofing
• Imposition
• Trapping
• RIPping
• Output Management
• Archiving

Since many of these tasks are unnecessary, or at least different, for digital production, fitting digital jobs into an offset workflow is often impractical.

Goals of Digital Production Workflow
Digital production workflow systems have grown from the functionality of the Controller or Color Server, which is generally a combination of the RIP and the workflows tools to perform specialized functions to prepare the job for digital printing and the particular output engine.

As an example, a typical digital production workflow solution might include:

• Internet-based Job Submission
• Conversion (i.e., to PDF, similar to in the offset world, shown above)
• Database Management
• Variable Data Template Creation and Output Management
• A tool for managing document sections
• A “tab creation” tool (since many digital documents are presentations and/or reports), which may also support other special features
• Page and Image Editing Tools (PDF or otherwise, used to add headers and footers, to add watermarks, to resize the document, etc.)
• PreFlight
• Color Management
• Proofing
• Trapping
• RIPping
• Media Catalog Management
• Output Management
• Output Load Balancing and/or Color Splitting (to send output to multiple devices, and/or to send B&W output to a black and white printer, while color pages go directly to the color output device)
• Archiving

A recent, important goal in digital production workflow has been that of moving some or all of these preproduction tasks off the Controller or Color Server, to another computer. This is good, because it allows the controller to drive the print engine, presumably at maximum speed instead of siphoning resources processing the next set of jobs to get them ready to print.

But, because of this specific design goal, in most cases, this means that there is very little automation for most of the processes associated with getting the job ready to print, because the workflow is “offline”. In the Hybrid production environment, one that mixes offset and digital, this type of workflow has no notion of jobs that are not going to be produced on digital output devices.

The Opportunities
As commercial print providers adopt digital technologies, it is necessary for workflow systems to support both digital production and offset production in one workflow system.

To achieve the efficiencies needed in order to be the lowest cost provider in print production, and to be able to profitably offer new services, there are many reasons why maintaining multiple workflow solutions is too complex to be sustainable:

• First, there you need to be able to look at all the jobs in the preproduction process from one view: either a job processing perspective or often from a scheduling and commerce (MIS) viewpoint.

• Best-practices equipment selection: if you have a “single view”, you’ll be able to make the decision to go digital vs. offset on the real merits of each production process. Customers don’t really want to buy a particular type of printing—they want a solution from your company that results in their job being printed—on whatever technology is appropriate that achieves the quality they are looking for at the price they desire.

• Finally, one of the biggest reasons to adopt Hybrid workflow is the cost of training operators, and the need to maintain what basically amounts to duplicate staffers to operate the disparate digital and offset preproduction workflow systems.

The Answer: Hybrid Workflow
True Hybrid workflow takes the two sets of capabilities above and merges them into one seamless workflow. A Hybrid Workflow system combines functions needed to process and output jobs to both digital printing equipment and to CTP or film for offset printing.

Next-generation workflows take this a step further, and consist of the following applications:

• Streamlined and integrated business and production processes and systems, using JDF
• Automated Workflow, for both digital and offset production
• Customer-facing systems that connect to both workflow and business systems, with support for both digital and offset processes and business rules
• Computer Integrated Manufacturing (CIM), to capture data and provide closed-loop tracking, control and reporting
• The implementation of standards for all workflow components

The following diagram shows how all the pieces of Hybrid Workflow fit together:




The Role of Standards
Standards minimize the risk associated with adopting new technologies, by ensuring
Interoperability between components in the workflow. Interoperability among software, and hardware enabled by standards gives your company more choices: in the vendor selection for each individual component, as well as in your ability to configure each component of the workflow in a way that fits the “big picture” of your operation.

Standards let you extend the capabilities of your systems so your operation can be more flexible, both in how your staff works internally as well as in the ability to change processes more easily to meet the demands of the changing marketplace. The most important standards for Hybrid Workflows are:

• PDF: Portable Document Format
o Content and workflow standard
o From creation through output
• JDF: Job Definition Format
o XML format communicates job intent
o Delivers metadata about job from creation through finishing
• PPML: Personalized Print Markup Language
o Variable Print Standard
o Documents contain “re-usable content”

The PDF standard provides the ability for documents and/or pages to flow seamlessly through the workflow. It has become a ubiquitous standard both for offset and digital production. The reasons are becoming obvious: PDF is a universal page container that lets many of the manual processes of preparing files for production be automated through software. Over the last couple of years, PDF has moved very quickly upstream to document creation. On the digital side, many systems are either converting “office”-type documents into PDF at the entry to the workflow, or are helping customers to create PDF with desktop print drivers or Acrobat Plug-ins. Similarly, offset workflow has moved to PDF, with native files from Quark and other applications being converted to PDF as they enter the workflow. The fact that both offset and digital are quickly moving to PDF “end-to-end” bodes well for the adoption of Hybrid Workflow solutions.

The JDF (Job Definition Format) standard provides the ability for commerce and production instructions to accompany those documents and/or pages. A large gamut of JDF solutions is emerging now, and there is great excitement on the part of almost all vendors as to the opportunities that will be afforded. JDF will provide the ability for automated processes, both digital and offset, starting with customer-facing systems, moving into business systems for estimating and planning, to the pressroom, and to finishing and delivery, across vendors. Because offset and digital equipment are invariably provided by multiple suppliers, JDF will help connect the elements of the Hybrid Workflow together.

PPML provides a much-needed standard for variable print, from the page itself to the variable components. PPML lets content be “reusable” and enables variable print applications to work across multiple vendors.

Example of the need for Hybrid Workflow
A printing company produces technical manuals for a number of automotive and other manufacturing clients. The company uses both digital and offset technologies.

An example of the type of work they produce is a one- or two-color inside book produced on a Xerox digital production machines, and a a four-color cover printed on a Komori offset press. The job then moves to the bindery for finishing, combining the digital and offset components. The company also has a warehouse in which they store the documents, and fulfill them for customers via an Internet-ordering system.

The company today uses an MIS system that tracks the work across the offset workflow, and employs a well-known offset workflow system.

“We treat digital stuff the same as everything else, but it has a different workflow. All the information is sitting out there (i.e., how many sheets), what were the impressions, how many sizes, what stock, how long did it take to run, RIP?”

Before Hybrid Workflow, the company doesn’t have the ability to plan and produce both the offset and digital components of these jobs, across both production methods. Each process is managed separately and jobs are managed separately.

After implementing Hybrid workflow, the company has total visibility into incoming jobs, jobs in progress, and finished jobs (for shipping to the customer, or for warehousing for later fulfillment) in one, integrated system. All the tasks, across the company are planned, scheduled, and executed from within the same integrated workflow environment.

Summary
The desire to combine offset and digital production in commercial print operations is only just beginning to become a mainstream industry need. Systems that combine both offset and digital production technologies and processes are just beginning to emerge.

These systems represent a great opportunity for commercial printing companies to “re-think” how jobs are managed and produced, and to use this process re-engineering to grow into more profitable value-added services and new markets.

Thursday, July 1, 2004

Document to Protect Your IT Investment


Originally appeared in NAPL's Tech Trends Newsletter, Summer 2004. Page 10.

Print service providers are becoming more and more dependent on information technology (IT), yet many companies fall short when it comes to documentation—a costly oversight that could wreak havoc with a company’s systems.

by Chuck Gehman

Many graphic communications have surprisingly little documentation for the mission critical information technology (IT) systems they use to run their businesses. The reason is simple: Documentation is a time-consuming process so it’s much easier (at least in the short-term) not to do it.

Also, many IT departments are asked to do too much with too few resources, so tasks that aren’t time-critical tend to fall by the wayside. Then, too, many managers want their IT staff to concentrate on developing and installing new systems, no documenting existing ones.

However, documentation is critically important to maximizing a company’s IT capabilities over the long-term, and company managers should learn to make it a part of the overall IT process. Documentation more than pays for itself when a company’s IT expert goes on vacation or finds another job.

If nothing is documented, the employee may spend hours trying to determine how your company’s systems work. Or attempting to find a solution to a problem that’s already been fixed—but no one can remember how!

How a company records its systems information depends on the amount of documentation required and the resources available. Some companies find that simply handwriting information into a notebook fills their needs, while others use spreadsheet programs such as Microsoft Excel or database programs like Microsoft Access. Whatever approach a company uses, it should include the following information in its documentation records:

- Serial numbers and contact information for technical support. Keep copies of all purchase information on hand. There’s nothing more frustrating than trying to find registration information or receipts for hardware and software, and the telephone numbers of support contacts when you are in the middle of a crisis.

- A diagram of the network infrastructure. An organization’s network is generally in a constant state of change, so it’s essential for companies to document how their networks are configured. Consider using one of the software programs designed for network documentation, like Microsoft Visio.

Log All Changes
Some of the most common problems in IT infrastructures arise from the network servers, cabling and associated equipment, so keep logs of all network equipment, indicating any repairs or changes made to configurations, and when various components are scheduled for service. Also include contact information for cabling and Internet suppliers.

- Installation logs. Establish an installation log and checklist for each workstation or server. If several computers will have identical configurations, develop a formal installation checklist to help ensure that each configuration complies. Include the options chosen when the operating system and software were installed, and information about the hard disk, RAM, processor type and speed.

- Change logs. Undocumented changes can cause major headaches, so document every change made to your company’s IT infrastructure.

- Error/event logs. Document problems, errors, power outages. For example, noting that every time a particular machine boots up, the user has to press the reset key to reach the desktop, can help spot the kind of trend that maintenance alone won’t fix. This kind of log can also help IT staff identify equipment that needs to be replaced before it crashes resulting in data loss, downtime or dissatisfied customers because a deadline is missed.

- Maintenance logs. These records serve as reminders to perform regular preventive maintenance (such as running anti-virus software on a server, or defragmenting the hard drive) and as a record that needed maintenance was performed.

However a company decides to create, maintain and store its documentation, it’s important to periodically create a copy of the information and store it offsite. This practice ensures that—should a problem arise with the company’s facility—there will be a record of all equipment, software and configurations—as well as a roadmap for putting it all back together if need be.

Friday, April 23, 2004

Web-to-Print Becomes a Product Category: It’s Business, not e-Business

Originally appeared in On Demand Journal

By Chuck Gehman


People are using the Internet to make travel arrangements and buy tickets. Amazon.com is profitable, and consumers buy goods over the Internet every day. Consumers are actually shopping for cars over the web (a couple of years ago, this seemed ridiculous, didn’t it?) We use the Internet for banking, too… these days, I am almost upset when I go online with my bank and notice that someone hasn’t cashed a check I wrote them a couple of weeks ago (in the few cases where I actually write the check by hand).


Access to up-to-the-minute information is key: we use the Internet to look up the weather forecast before traveling, for both home and destination cities. Google and other Internet search engines have become the first choice for high school and college student research when they write papers. Ubiquitous Internet access is truly here. According to a recent Nielsen NetRatings report, about 80 percent of Americans ages 35-54 have Internet access compared with 77 percent of children and 63 percent of seniors. An estimated 204 million people now have Internet access in the US—quite an impressive number.


What’s even more astonishing, is how quickly the Internet has become an essential work tool. From online research to web marketing and web collaboration, wired employees and employers are online and expect the companies they deal with to be online as well.


The printing industry is not exempt from this trend. What we’re seeing in the printing industry today is strong demand from customers for Internet applications, from job submission to fulfillment applications. Printing companies that wouldn’t have considered implementing Internet applications two or three years ago are finally ready to make the plunge. Let’s face it: as recently as four years ago, many commercial printers considered the Fax machine to be the embodiment of high tech communications.


According to CAPV’s March 2003 study entitled, “The U.S. e-Print Infrastructure Market”, more than half of the print providers surveyed said they offered Web-enabled services to their customers. Isn’t it time for the other 50% of printers to take the plunge and get wired for business??


As we rapidly approach the “JDF Drupa.” we are beginning to see systems that link customers on the Internet to production and business systems at the printing company. Both printers and their customers alike have begun to realize just how powerful the Internet can be as a customer acquisition and retention tool. Most of the discussions of JDF have been about programming presses (ala CIP3 PPF and ink key presets), but we’re entering a new era of JDF where the “customer’s intent” will be brought into the equation.


We are starting to see companies that were early adopters of Internet technologies now providing real functionality to their customers (not just “brochure-ware”), such as job submission, simple specifications, online catalogs, and job status information, and they need ways to increase their traction and business with customers via the web. These companies are ready to take it to the next level by adding even more functionality to their web presence.


In the past, printers couldn’t compare one web-enabled system to another. This is changing very rapidly, and at Drupa, you’ll see many examples of functional Internet-based products from many companies. Web applications for print have finally matured enough to become a product category. It’s no longer about e-commerce, it’s finally about what it should have been all along: doing business with customers in the most efficient way possible.


Monday, March 1, 2004

No One’s Buying JDF!


Originally appeared in On Demand Journal

By Chuck Gehman

March 1, 2004


One might say that JDF (Job Definition Format), the CIP4 organization’s industry-wide XML standard for interoperability has been, a solution looking for a problem. The burgeoning standard, in development for a few years now, set as its ambitious goal the complete description of prepress, press and postpress processes in an XML (Extensible Markup Language) specification that now is reaching for 800 pages.


This lofty goal of “everything (i.e., software and machines) talking to everything else (i.e., presses and finishing equipment)” still hasn’t quite been reached, but today, thanks to the work of almost 200 companies cooperating in CIP4 (www.cip4.org), and the work of many hundreds of individuals from the member companies, JDF products are emerging that actually work and provide real value to printers seeking to increase their productivity and competitive advantage.


At the recent On Demand Conference and Expo, JDF in the real world was demonstrated in a CIP4 and Advanstar (the promoters of the show) hosted “JDF Tour.” Interoperability between several software and workflow vendors’ applications was shown in an educational venue that was assisted by several RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology) students.


EFI, HP, Objective Advantage (a software development and consulting firm focused on JDF) and Wave Corporation (makers of the popular MediaBank Digital Asset Management system), as well as several other companies, demonstrated the ability for JDF files to be created on one system and acted upon by another.


The tour created a mock workflow for a fictitious company called “Kimono Bank”. Kimono’s three branches in New York, San Francisco and Miami all work with different advertising agencies and print service providers, who each employ their own workflow.


In this demonstration, JDF provided the glue that allowed Kimono to work with these different companies, but still leverage their print assets across the corporation. For example, a job submitted by a user at the San Francisco Kimono branch using EFI’s exchange could be output at a print service provider on a CTP device driven by EFI’s own OneFlow, or on an HP Indigo press at another print service provider. Once the job is completed, it can be stored in a web catalog application for future re-ordering by the Kimono staffers in Miami, or archived at the company’s New York ad agencies in their MediaBank Digital Asset Management system.


Thanks to the JDF standard, all of this was accomplished without re-keying the job information, and without having to “import” or require the user to manually “translate” the metadata (the information about the job).


This is a simple demonstration that clearly drives home the power of JDF, and repeats of JDF tours like this are essential to help potential users fully understand its benefits. The conversations to date about JDF have been about “nuts and bolts. Now we are beginning to show real applications that drive home the importance of adopting this critically important standard.


That’s the key: JDF isn’t about XML and software—it’s about addressing many of the challenges that the industry faces. As we approach Drupa, we’re going to see a lot more applications emerging that employ JDF in really useful ways that help users, in both print buying companies and at printing companies, expand their capabilities to become more efficient and profitable by producing more work in less time with the same or less labor.


The bottom line: no one’s buying JDF for its own sake! What we are buying with JDF-enabled applications is solutions to problems that can’t be solved any other way.

Sunday, January 25, 2004

e-Commerce and Job Submission: Content Meets Commerce


Originally appeared in GATF Technology Forecast 2004

By Chuck Gehman


We’ve reached the point in the printing industry where we should no longer talk about “e-Commerce” as a standalone subject. Entering 2004, an integrated business and production workflow that incorporates content and commerce has become an essential part of business for printing companies of all sizes.

We shouldn’t focus on ways to combat reverse auctions, or sites that provide buyers with the ability to send print RFQs to multiple sites for quotes. Instead, by offering compelling, functional and integrated online services to customers, their perception of the Printer changes from a commodity supplier producing goods that can be anonymously procured to a value-added service provider. The discussion is more about the next generation of workflow—where the customer’s workflow is “connected” to our own via Internet applications.


The Landscape Today

In their recent study, entitled “The New Corporate Print Customer: A Profile of a Market in Transition”, July 2003, CAP Ventures (www.capv.com) confirms the premise that very few corporate customers are using their own print e-procurement systems today. According to CAPV, only 14% of those surveyed said that they employed a system for either print or paper procurement. They were also asked whether their print providers offered such a solution, and over 59% of document owners and 48% of print buyers said they did not know.


According to CAPV, in their March 2003 study entitled, “The U.S. e-Print Infrastructure Market”, more than half of the print providers surveyed said they offered Web-enabled services to their customers. This disparity in results between the two surveys can only mean that either Printer’s sales forces are not effectively promoting their online solutions, or the functionality of those solutions are not meeting the needs of their corporate customers.


In the July report, CAPV goes on to say that they “believe that integration of Web infrastructure with production systems and back-office business systems is critical for print providers to realize the full benefits of the technology. Until this integration occurs, Web solutions will primarily have value as customer acquisition and customer retention tools, and will remain a cost of doing business.“


Fortunately, as we enter 2004, the “year of JDF” (Job Definition Format, www.cip4.org, an industry standards initiative that promises to make such integration possible), web-based solutions that provide such capabilities are emerging and are, in fact, in use by some printers today. Market segments in the industry that are benefiting by offering such integrated online workflow applications to their customers include the small quick print shop, digital on-demand facilities, corporate InPlants, sheetfed and web offset commercial printers, packaging printers and specialized corporate identity printers.


Drivers for Adoption of Online Technologies

Printers and their customers are discovering that there are numerous benefits to be found in working together online. For both, the primary drivers are increased employee productivity and cost savings. Printers specifically can benefit from restored profitability due to the increased efficiency and the ability to offer value-added services. There are numerous ancillary benefits for printers, including better customer service and customer lock-in.

Drivers for printing companies to offer these services include:

  • Need to improve sales and customer service productivity (keep sales people selling new jobs, not chasing status on work in progress or delivering proofs)
  • Need to minimize manual order entries, decreasing chance for error; integration between internal business systems (like accounting, estimating, production systems, etc.) and the web site provides this benefit
  • Desire to link incoming jobs with estimates, costing and production workflow (again, integration provides this link)
  • Need to automate job progress through departments, and control change orders and track digital job files
  • Increase internal and external communication and improve customer service (if the system used by production personnel and CSRs in the plant has status information, you should be able to share a subset of that information with customers and sales people via the web)
  • Need to offer value-added services (mailing, fulfillment, on-demand, etc.)


While a relatively large number of printers have web sites today (by some estimates, more than 85% of printing companies), very few have sites that are actually “functional” and provide real services to customers (as witnessed by the CAPV survey results). Most today are still “brochure-ware” sites that briefly introduce the company and its technical capabilities. Many printers have “request a quote” button on their sites, but they typically provide a single form (often either too complicated or conversely, too limited) that sends an email to a sales person or the owner with some basic information—there’s no direct connection to estimating or to workflow, so the information must be manually interpreted and re-keyed into another system.


Printers who have adopted functional web sites today have, in many cases, done so in response to pressure from competitors offering such services, or upon the request of an important customer. This tracks closely with the way Printers have traditionally adopted most new technologies, and isn’t necessarily a bad thing. In fact, it explains why, despite much of the hoopla (both positive and negative) of the last few years, these applications are now beginning to achieve widespread acceptance—most customers weren’t asking for them before. Today, print buyer customers want their Printers to deliver such services because:

  • Most print buyers are not experts in printing processes and technologies (in fact, successful print procurement managers tend to move quickly up the ladder into what are perceived as more “important” corporate commodities like raw materials used for manufacturing)
  • Want to move most print buying from a corporate procurement function out to the document “owner” (i.e., the creator or user of the printed product), while still maintaining control over print spending
  • Desire 24/7 customer service, and want to delegate the lion’s share of this support to the Printer rather than directly supporting end-users
  • Need higher value interaction with suppliers (i.e., don’t want to call for status information, preferring to spend time working on new jobs and other ways to improve their own service to their internal customers)
  • Want self-service status, billing and shipping tools


Anatomy of a Fully Integrated, Web-to-Print Operation

What are the things that a printing company web site needs to do to provide real value to the print-buying customer and to internal operational needs? How does this translate into better customer service and increased efficiency in the print manufacturing operation? Figure 1 outlines the range of functionality that a robust, full-featured printer-delivered web site, integrated with business and production systems, should provide.


The ability to specify a new job, and to submit simple specifications of the job for estimating is the first step in the process. Only a limited number of print buyers will want to provide complete, technical specifications for jobs that they want quoted, but that ability should be provided. For everyone else, a “quick ticket” should be provided so that the minimal required amount of information about the proposed job can be submitted.


In an ideal world, once the job has been submitted for quote, it will flow directly into the estimating system so a print professional can “fill in the blanks”, and deliver the fleshed-out spec back to the customer in an interactive process.


Once the customer has decided to move forward with the job as quoted, a robust web offering includes the ability for customers to deliver files via a simple transfer method. These files should be associated (in business and workflow systems) with the quote that has been previously provided to the customer.


Figure 1: Anatomy of a Fully Integrated, Web-to-Print Operation

Source: EFI, Inc.

As we all know, it’s a rare job that is actually complete when the digital files are first sent to the printer. There are bound to be changes, and a web-integrated content management system allows those changed elements (i.e., images, graphics, pages, text) to be delivered from the customer to the printer easily and with version tracking. It’s also important to track changes that impact work in progress at the printing plant (in prepress, for example), so they can be associated with change orders and an approval workflow and later be billed back to the customer (preventing miscommunication and billing disputes).


Once the job moves into prepress at the printing company, customers should be able to view page proofs of jobs (i.e., softproofing and/or to download files for color-managed output on a local proofing device), and to approve or decline them.


For many print applications, variable print is becoming an important component. So an integrated web solution should offer the ability for customers to both create “versioned” documents (i.e., typesetting their own business cards), as well as to “customize” template-driven variable documents by applying pre-programmed business rules that provide the ability to programmatically change out text, images and database-supplied content (i.e., one-to-one marketing applications).


Integration with mailing list providers and corporate databases are becoming another essential touch point for Printers offering web site solutions. For example, an insurance company may want their agents to order customized brochures (with their own office address and the agent’s name, as an example), and then choose from a list of customers and prospects to which they can mail the brochure. The Printer will receive orders from agents around the country via the web site. Workflow automation features turn the orders into optimized print jobs (where multiple orders are ganged on the same press run) incorporating the agent’s customized data as well as the customer-specific data from the mailing list provider’s database.


Many jobs today will incorporate elements that are printed offset, some items that are pulled from finished goods inventory and others that are printed on-demand. The web site needs to allow an order to be built that supports all of these type of job elements, and allow multiple ship-to destinations, as well as pre-built and build-on-the-fly kitting for fulfillment applications.


Workflow integration can be as simple as digital files landing on a file server at the printing company, or as complex as automatic settings-correct PDF generation, automatic soft- and color-managed hardcopy- proofing, whether at the Print manufacturing site or at the end-user site.


For some customers, Printers may desire to provide workflow integration that goes as far as actual output (for example, on digital variable jobs: customer places the order, digital files are chosen, and the job automatically enters a particular “workflow” pipeline, where they are processed and automatically output on a digital press. This type of automation can be particularly suitable for InPlant work, but is beginning to see adoption in commercial print, too.


While most Printers don’t want their customers to see all the “ups-and-downs” their jobs go through as they move through the production process, they do want customers to be able to login and see the status of their jobs at the level of detail the printer wishes to communicate. Since this job status may well be tracked today inside an existing print management system, we need the ability to populate status fields out to the web site.


Any robust, integrated web application should also provide email notifications to both the Printer and the customer upon major events (i.e., order received, order in process, proof sent, proof approved, change order, order shipped, reorder, inventory low condition, etc.)


At completion, the job is shipped, and it is a necessity for the customer to be able to view status on the web that this has happened, when, by what carrier and when they can expect it to arrive at its destination.


Accepting credit cards for smaller jobs, and processing corporate payments electronically or interfacing to corporate procurement or ERP systems (like SAP,) are becoming necessities for Printers, too. An invoice should be presented to the corporate customer in the way they desire, and the web experience should support that. The more accurate the invoice, the more timely the manner in which it is presented, results in the higher the likelihood of its getting paid more quickly.


Finally, respecting and supporting the sales relationship is a delicate issue with online systems. A system should be complimentary to the personal relationships between buyers and their reps at the printing company—not work at odds with them. For larger jobs, the ability for the sales person to view the invoice, add markups and/or make corrections in an interactive workflow with plant personnel is a huge value-add.


Summary

Restoration of shrinking margins, the ability to handle more complex work (and shorter runs), while controlling costs and at the same time capturing additional market share via value-added services are all key goals for successful printers in 2004.


By offering a workflow- and business- integrated, functional web site that provides better service while streamlining both your customer’s business processes and your own internal operations is a key way to achieve these goals. All of these things are possible today, and are key ingredients for the successful Printer in the future.