(518) 489-9019

ourBlog

October 26, 2009

Designers Have More Fun

Category: Creativity, Marketing — Tags: , , — Sarah @ 5:55 am

We think marketing is the most fun you can have with your clothes on.  And we suspect this might be because marketing time is play time for us.

Think about it!  The whole idea of marketing is telling other people how GREAT your stuff is.  This is not a business for the serious and the somber.  This is a business for the enthusiastic, the eccentric, and the energetic.  And, for better or for worse, those words describe the personalities of the imPress staff.

So the approach to marketing at imPress is to play.  Play with different lettering.  Play with different layout.  Play with different word choice.  And, as often as possible, play with toy guns loaded with confetti.

And play with our customers.  Marketing is so much more fun with a buddy.  You know the details about your products, and we know how to make them seem oh so fun.  So you play with our ideas, and we play with yours.  Soon enough, the playing with ideas turns into playing with action figures or a beach ball.  And that’s fun for everyone.

But don’t worry, we play nice.  We like sharing.  We share our expertise.  We share our opinions.  We share our experience.  And we love it when our clients share things with us, too.  And we’ll give you some of our thoughts if you give us some of yours.

We know some of you might be a little nervous about this whole idea.  You might be wondering how we can do a great job with your marketing materials if we’re so busy being fun.  But let’s face it – we’re not here to remove your appendix.  We’re not here to design a safe space shuttle.  We’re here to make people like your company.  So we’re great at marketing because we’re fun.  And even though you might not want your surgeon to giggle while he works, it’s a good thing that we do.

Want to come play with us?

Comments (0)

October 19, 2009

What Stewart’s Does Incredibly Well

Category: Marketing — Tags: , , , — Sarah @ 6:27 am

Do a back flip if you love Stewart’s!

If you happen to be from outside the upstate New York area and don’t know what we’re talking about, Stewart’s is a convenience store chain.  At Stewart’s, you can buy your basic convenience store items – although many of them are yummier than average, thanks to the fact that a lot of their merchandise is specially made at their own plant.  (Their gasoline, on the other hand, is neither yummier nor less yummy than average.)

In addition to having mad ice cream making skills, Stewart’s is also very proficient in something that all of our businesses could stand to work on – marketing skills.

They have this strategy of using one of their products to market another.  In other words, if you drop by Stewart’s to fill up your tank, advertising on the gas pump is going to remind you that Stewart’s sells milk.  If you go in for a cup of joe, the coffee cup is going to remind you to come back and fill your tank.  When you purchase milk, the packaging might remind you to buy coffee.  The point is, they like to make sure that patrons who are shopping there for one reason are aware of other products that are available.

We business owners know that although we’re always looking for new customers, our prior clients are often even more important.  Think about it.  They already found your company.  They already trusted you enough to buy something from you.  All you have to do is keep them coming back.  Stewart’s wants to make sure its customers keep on shopping there, and they try to make their customers branch out in terms of what they buy.

Think about the products and services your business sells or provides.  Is there some cross advertising you could be doing?  Can one of your products market another?  Could you put an advertisement for your nail manicuring services on the bag that you give to a customer when they purchase hairspray at your salon?  Could you give your lawn care customers a coupon for your snow removal services at your last visit of the year?  Or, for another spin on the idea, could you buddy up with another company and market each other’s services somehow?

If nothing’s ringing a bell for you there, let’s remember a few other valuable lessons we can learn from Stewart’s today.

1. If your business involves take-home food containers, let them advertise your business.  Coffee cups with a message on them are particularly wonderful.  The cup and message sit on the purchaser’s desk all day long.  Think of it as a mini billboard.

2. Sell strawberry milk at your business.

3. Rename your company something that reminds your customers of Jon Stewart.

4. Be awesome.  Then, maybe one day a random printing company will write an unsolicited blog post about your business and provide you with a little free advertisio, like we did for Stewart’s today.

Comments (0)

October 12, 2009

Excited By Stock

Category: Print — Tags: , , , , , — Sarah @ 8:37 am

There’s glossy paper, matte finish paper, paper gumbo, paper kabobs, sweet and sour paper, paper and cheese sandwiches, paper stew, paper pie, paper soup…

We love paper stock.  We love it as much as 1980’s dads love short shorts and fanny packs.  And today we’d like to give you some insight into our passion for paper through a poem.

Ahem.

Paper stock, paper stock, it’s you that we heart.

We love you so much, we don’t know where to start.

We love glossy paper that’s smooth to the touch.

We also love using matte paper so much.

We love different brightnesses, we love different weights,

We love paper from trees grown in all fifty states.

Our crisp photo paper gets us bothered and hot,

And recycled paper always hits the spot.

In a river of paper we’d love to be floating,

And don’t get us started on aqueous coating.

The texture, the color, the thickness, the smell,

We love paper in all different sizes as well.

From slightly translucent to truly opaque,

If it’s paper, we love it, and there’s no mistake.

Paper makes us smile when we’ve started to sob,

And we choose the best paper for any print job.

Comments (0)

October 5, 2009

Pounds and Pounds of Paper

Category: Print — Tags: , , — admin @ 11:17 am

Fun Geeky Printing Fact of the Day: Paper is measured in pounds.

Well…sort of.

If you purchase a new package of printer paper, chances are you’ll find somewhere on the packaging a reference to pounds.  Chances are also good that if you’re using standard printer paper, this reference will mention that your paper is 28 pounds.

Really?  That pack of paper is 28 pounds?  And my 86-year-old grandmother can lift it over her head with one hand?

Actually, your pack of printer paper has been cut from a bigger ream that actually was 28 pounds.  This gigantic ream of paper had 500 sheets just like the package you bought, but the dimensions of each piece were much bigger.  The paper company sliced that large ream of paper to make the regular sized paper that you bought.  Your package of paper plus all the other packages of paper that were cut from that ream equal the 28 pounds.

To give you a better visual, imagine this big ream as a large, yummy, 28-pound chocolate sheet cake.  Picture that big cake getting sliced into four equal pieces.  You’d end up with four printer paper package sized pieces of cake, which altogether weigh 28 pounds but individually weigh about 7.  (Which is why dear Grammie could handle one with such ease.)

This admittedly odd system of measuring paper in pounds does make a bit of sense when you consider that it allows for a measuring stick for thickness of an individual sheet.

Back to our yummy chocolate sheet cake.  (Are you hungry yet?)  If that same 28-pound sheet cake was cut into 8 pieces instead of 4, each of the pieces would have the same thickness as the slices from the first time we cut the cake, but different dimensions.  Therefore, if you found yourself starring on one of those awesome cake-decorating reality shows and you randomly needed two pieces of cake with different shapes but the same thickness, you could get two slices that had both been cut from a 28-pound cake and you’d know their thickness was the same.

If there were two uncut sheet cakes that had the same dimensions, but one cake was lighter than the other, we would know that one of the cakes is less dense.  Similarly, if you purchase a ream of 20 pound paper instead of 28 pound paper, each piece of paper is slightly thinner.  And regardless of whether you buy 8.5” x 11” paper that is 20 pounds or 8.5” by 14” that is 20 pounds, the sheets are each exactly the same thickness.

Once you get the hang of it, the system is really a piece of cake.  (Oh yes, we went there.)

Comments (0)