It really depends on the purpose behind what you are printing. For instance, if you are printing for direct mail advertising, it's the "message" that is important, not necessarily the quality of the print (within reason). In a direct mail print/produce/mail environment, you are getting paid by the piece. The more pieces you produce, the more revenue you generate. As far as quality goes, a typical direct mail response rate for a prospect solicitation averages around 2%, so, 98% are going to throw it in the trash. Does it matter if that piece being thrown away is "high quality"?
Proof in the pudding (and, I think I've said this before in previous posts): I get an automotive piece in the mail about a special sale this weekend. I am interested in buying a new car, and, the offer looks pretty good. I'd really like to attend, but, do you see where the reflex blue in the bottom right corner of my letter is starting to look a little washed-out? That's it, I'm NOT going! (see what I mean)
It really depends on the purpose behind what you are printing. For instance, if you are printing for direct mail advertising, it's the "message" that is important, not necessarily the quality of the print (within reason). In a direct mail print/produce/mail environment, you are getting paid by the piece. The more pieces you produce, the more revenue you generate. As far as quality goes, a typical direct mail response rate for a prospect solicitation averages around 2%, so, 98% are going to throw it in the trash. Does it matter if that piece being thrown away is "high quality"?
Proof in the pudding (and, I think I've said this before in previous posts): I get an automotive piece in the mail about a special sale this weekend. I am interested in buying a new car, and, the offer looks pretty good. I'd really like to attend, but, do you see where the reflex blue in the bottom right corner of my letter is starting to look a little washed-out? That's it, I'm NOT going! (see what I mean)
Not to mention you can give the post office a high quality printed piece....no telling what ends up in the mailbox.
Or IF it ends up in the mailbox.
One thing that can only be learned by experience is "good enough." We all run under deadlines, and are hampered often by how much the customer is willing to pay. Sometimes you can pick a piece to death, but take a week to hammer out all the little imperfections. If it's good enough for the customer, sometimes you just gotta let some stuff go.
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