Buttonpresser
Member
Not sure where to post this exactly but here it goes...
I own/operated a small digital print/design shop in a town with two mid-sized colleges. They've been sending their graphic design students down to our shop when they need non-standard prints done that the schools' print depts can't accommodate.
There are about 150-200 of these graphic design students that will pop down with their projects on a thumb drive. The files are far from press-ready and we will inspect the files and send them back out the door to go fix the files and return later. They may make 2-3 trips down to us before the file is printable. This takes about 20-40 minutes of "counter time" and all for a whopping $0.60 on the final bill. It's not always in-person visits, some will email us and a few will call.
We're losing a ton of time and revenue on these students. I've been weighing my options but I'm at a loss on how to stop this bleeding (of course I'm writing this durning their finals week when it's the worst).
Here's some options I'm weighing, feel free to add or modify your own ideas.
I own/operated a small digital print/design shop in a town with two mid-sized colleges. They've been sending their graphic design students down to our shop when they need non-standard prints done that the schools' print depts can't accommodate.
There are about 150-200 of these graphic design students that will pop down with their projects on a thumb drive. The files are far from press-ready and we will inspect the files and send them back out the door to go fix the files and return later. They may make 2-3 trips down to us before the file is printable. This takes about 20-40 minutes of "counter time" and all for a whopping $0.60 on the final bill. It's not always in-person visits, some will email us and a few will call.
We're losing a ton of time and revenue on these students. I've been weighing my options but I'm at a loss on how to stop this bleeding (of course I'm writing this durning their finals week when it's the worst).
Here's some options I'm weighing, feel free to add or modify your own ideas.
- Charge a minimum order price, say $5.00 and then waive that minimum for non-students (slightly unethical and doesn't really solve the problem).
- Require the professor to collect and inspect these projects and send them to us in a batch (professors don't seem to know how to create press-ready files either, facepalm).
- Tell professors that the graphic design students aren't welcome anymore (evil but an option).
- Print whatever it is they give me, if I can, regardless of it's "printability" and let them come back if it's wrong (still have the issue of multi-visits and low price tag.)