All of my life I've been involved in the printing trade, I literally grew up in a printing factory and my family has been in the game for several generations (my father believes I'm the 7th generation of printer in our family, traced way back to Germany over 100 years ago).
I'm not encouraging my children into this trade. Whilst I enjoy my job, I'd rather my kid's future to be in an industry that's developing and growing, not showing worrying signs of fading into history on the back of the digital and Internet revolution: I don't know the figures but when you can access all the information you need on your smart phone, tablet or PC, why bother reading a newspaper or magazine or the like?
Having a discussion with a work mate, we've watched the value of an honest to god pressman decrease with the advent of technology that takes a high percentage of the "human" factor out of running presses, and with the amount of shop closures there's a glut of operators out there, which has resulted in wage stagnation (in real terms we are going backwards!) and limited opportunities to switch to "greener" pastures, as there simply aren't any!
From what I've observed with our apprentices the next generation of printers won't have any of the problem solving skills and depth of knowledge that the current printers do, but the average age of good, experienced printers has got to be around 40 odd years (just guessing here but I'm the youngest in my crew and I'm 37), and we are all worried about the future and the strong possibility that the skill set we've developed will go the way of the dinosaurs in the not too distant future. In certain circumstances this could be advantageous as good operators may become a valuable commodity as more and more people leave the industry and the dead wood is culled, so to speak.
So what does the future hold? Will offset printing survive? Will digital kill the pressman, with the tradesman discarded for a cheaper alternative who can be trained to press control/P/10,000 copies thanks very muchly? Do pre-press suffer the same concerns, given that anyone with a computer can whip up their own stationary from design through to running off a 1000 L/H on their own printer?
I believe there are interesting and troubling times ahead, and personally I'm wondering about up-skilling and leaving the trade entirely, or re-training into more specialized areas of printing that are less likely to disappear.
I guess we will have to keep our chins up and keep working but consider our options come what may.
Thoughts??
I'm not encouraging my children into this trade. Whilst I enjoy my job, I'd rather my kid's future to be in an industry that's developing and growing, not showing worrying signs of fading into history on the back of the digital and Internet revolution: I don't know the figures but when you can access all the information you need on your smart phone, tablet or PC, why bother reading a newspaper or magazine or the like?
Having a discussion with a work mate, we've watched the value of an honest to god pressman decrease with the advent of technology that takes a high percentage of the "human" factor out of running presses, and with the amount of shop closures there's a glut of operators out there, which has resulted in wage stagnation (in real terms we are going backwards!) and limited opportunities to switch to "greener" pastures, as there simply aren't any!
From what I've observed with our apprentices the next generation of printers won't have any of the problem solving skills and depth of knowledge that the current printers do, but the average age of good, experienced printers has got to be around 40 odd years (just guessing here but I'm the youngest in my crew and I'm 37), and we are all worried about the future and the strong possibility that the skill set we've developed will go the way of the dinosaurs in the not too distant future. In certain circumstances this could be advantageous as good operators may become a valuable commodity as more and more people leave the industry and the dead wood is culled, so to speak.
So what does the future hold? Will offset printing survive? Will digital kill the pressman, with the tradesman discarded for a cheaper alternative who can be trained to press control/P/10,000 copies thanks very muchly? Do pre-press suffer the same concerns, given that anyone with a computer can whip up their own stationary from design through to running off a 1000 L/H on their own printer?
I believe there are interesting and troubling times ahead, and personally I'm wondering about up-skilling and leaving the trade entirely, or re-training into more specialized areas of printing that are less likely to disappear.
I guess we will have to keep our chins up and keep working but consider our options come what may.
Thoughts??