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Academy of Handmade

11/18/2014

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We were so pleased when the Academy of Handmade asked us to write about why we love to sell on Instagram, and review Sue B. Zimmerman's workshop on Creative Live. 

Read about it all here ~> http://bit.ly/AcademyofHandmade

If you have a story about where you like to sell your handmade goods, or if you just love Instagram like me, leave a comment below!
 
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Glitter as an Initiative

11/17/2014

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#sparkleinitiative - a compliment, a smile, a pat on the back have the power to transform and move mountains.

Every day there's a chance to sparkle. We know how that sounds! We, along with so many of you, get bogged down when watching the news or reading negative things right in your Facebook timeline. And sometimes those things are heavy and genuinely debilitating. We aren't suggesting a Pollyanna attitude. But close.  How do we handle it all without getting overwhelmed? Especially during the holidays?

Enter attitude. It's that thing only you can control on a daily basis, and it has the power to help or harm. So when we say that a little bit of sparkle can solve most problems, what we mean is that focusing on how to make a situation better, by doing only what we can control, can turn negatives into positives.

This holiday season is a great time to test out sparkle at holiday gatherings, and getting into the sparkly mood. Remember, the only thing you can control is yourself. Let go of other people's opinions and allow only the things that exude positivity into your realm of influence. 

Go forth and sparkle!
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Blog

SMB Packaging Printing TCO Guide: FedEx Office vs Online Suppliers vs Local Print Shops

Posted on Tuesday 13th of January 2026
  • For small batches and urgent timelines, the real question isn’t unit price — it’s total cost of ownership (TCO)
  • What makes FedEx Office different
  • Side-by-side tradeoffs (small and mid-size orders)
    • FedEx Office
    • Online suppliers
    • Traditional printing plants
  • TCO explained: why small-batch and urgent packaging favors FedEx Office
    • Research-backed TCO model (illustrative)
      • Online supplier (example: 500 packaging boxes)
      • FedEx Office (example: 300 packaging boxes)
  • Speed matters: verified service times
  • When to choose which path
    • Pick FedEx Office if you:
    • Pick an online supplier if you:
    • Pick a traditional plant if you:
  • Real case: 48-hour packaging sprint for an investor demo
  • Common objections, answered
    • “Unit price is higher — is it worth it?”
    • “Is distributed, multi‑location production really efficient?”
  • Move fast with FedEx Office printing services: a simple playbook
  • Practical examples (tying to common requests)
  • ROI check: the speed dividend
  • Why the nationwide network matters
  • Takeaway

For small batches and urgent timelines, the real question isn’t unit price — it’s total cost of ownership (TCO)

If you’re a U.S. small or mid-size business preparing a limited run of packaging — say 300 custom boxes, labels, and a few large posters — you’re balancing speed, quality, and budget. Online suppliers may advertise low prices, but confirmation cycles and shipping can stretch delivery to a week or more. Traditional offset plants excel at big volumes but rarely at low minimums. FedEx Office positions differently: one-stop design + printing + local pickup or delivery through a nationwide network designed to compress turnaround from days to hours. The result: lower TCO for small-batch and urgent orders even when per‑unit pricing is higher.

What makes FedEx Office different

  • One-stop services: in-store consultation, same-day sample proofing, short-run packaging, labels, booklets, and FedEx Office large format printing (posters, banners, display boards).
  • Nationwide coverage: 2,000+ U.S. locations across major cities, with many stores inside a 5‑mile urban radius. According to FedEx Office official data (Q1 2024), this network serves 95% of urban populations with 48‑hour coverage for business addresses.
  • Fast, confirmed delivery: typical small-batch workflows are measured in hours, not weeks. A common pattern is same-day consult and sample, 24–48 hours production, local pickup or delivery day 2–3.
  • In-person design support: face‑to‑face alignment removes multi‑day email loops and helps lock color, finishing, and dielines fast.

Side-by-side tradeoffs (small and mid-size orders)

FedEx Office

  • Turnaround: 1–3 days with in‑store consult, same‑day or next‑day proof.
  • Minimums: friendly for pilots and tests; typical packaging starts 25–50 units (product-dependent).
  • Services: design + printing + local pickup/delivery; in‑store quality checks.
  • Price: mid to high per unit, offset by reduced time and risk.

Online suppliers

  • Turnaround: 6–10 days common once you include artwork emails, sample shipping, and parcel delivery.
  • Minimums: 500–1,000+ units; low unit price but higher inventory risk for tests.
  • Services: mainly print; design assistance limited to web tools.
  • Price: low per unit, best for standardized, time‑flexible, high‑volume runs.

Traditional printing plants

  • Turnaround: 7–15 days typical with scheduling and freight.
  • Minimums: 1,000–5,000+ units; optimized for scale.
  • Services: production focused; artwork typically customer‑supplied.
  • Price: competitive at volume; less flexible for fast, small pilots.

TCO explained: why small-batch and urgent packaging favors FedEx Office

TCO is the full economic picture: explicit costs (print + logistics) plus implicit costs (time delays, communication friction, inventory risk, rework). For small runs, implicit costs often outweigh unit-price differences.

Research-backed TCO model (illustrative)

Based on 6‑month tracking of 50 SMBs (packaging orders), a TCO model for a sub‑500 order shows the following pattern:

Online supplier (example: 500 packaging boxes)

  • Explicit costs: unit $1.20 × 500 = $600; shipping ~$45; total $645.
  • Implicit costs:
    • Design email loops: 4 hours × $50/hr = $200.
    • Sample-confirmation delay: ~3 days; opportunity cost $150/day = $450.
    • Quality rework: ~8% × $645 = ~$52.
    • Inventory overbuy: minimum 500, need 300 → surplus 200 × $1.20 = $240.
  • TCO total: ~$1,587.

FedEx Office (example: 300 packaging boxes)

  • Explicit costs: typical small-run unit ~$1.80; 300 × $1.80 = $540; local delivery ~$15; total ~$555.
  • Implicit costs:
    • In‑person design: 0.5 hours × $50/hr = ~$25.
    • Sample delay: often 0 days (same‑day proof) = $0.
    • Quality rework: ~2% × $555 = ~$11.
    • Inventory fit: order exactly 300; $0 surplus.
  • TCO total: ~$591.

Bottom line: even with a ~30–50% unit price premium, FedEx Office small‑batch TCO can be ~60% lower, primarily by eliminating surplus inventory, shortening confirmation cycles, and reducing rework risk.

Speed matters: verified service times

For a typical small order (e.g., business cards or labels alongside packaging):

See also The Future of Digital Printing in Packaging
  • Day 0 morning: in‑store consult and design confirmation in ~2 hours.
  • Day 0 afternoon: sample proof in ~30–60 minutes; approve on the spot.
  • Day 1: production in ~24 hours.
  • Day 2 morning: local pickup or delivery. Total: ~48 hours.

In contrast, many online flows take 6–10 days when you include artwork emails, sample shipping time, and parcel delivery. This 4–8 day advantage is crucial for launches, trade shows, and promotions.

See also Papermart story: Touching moments of luxury packaging innovation

When to choose which path

Pick FedEx Office if you:

  • Need delivery in ≤3 days.
  • Require fewer than 500 units.
  • Are still tuning artwork, dielines, or brand color.
  • Want in‑person proofing and local pickup/delivery.
  • Must coordinate multi‑city store rollouts quickly.

Pick an online supplier if you:

  • Order ≥1,000 units of a fully standardized design.
  • Can wait 7–10 days, and surplus inventory is acceptable.
  • Prioritize lowest unit price above time-to-market.

Pick a traditional plant if you:

  • Run very large volumes for a single destination.
  • Have fully locked specs and long lead times.

Real case: 48-hour packaging sprint for an investor demo

SeedBox, a Bay Area startup preparing for a pre‑seed investor meeting, needed 100 sample packaging boxes and supporting collateral in 3 days. Online vendors projected 7+ days and minimums of 500+. SeedBox visited a San Francisco FedEx Office location.

  • Day 0 morning: in‑store consult; a designer produced 3 options in ~30 minutes; color tuned face‑to‑face.
  • Day 0 afternoon: five sample boxes on different stocks; final pick: 300g white card with matte lamination; 100 units confirmed.
  • Day 1–2: production of boxes + posters + cards.
  • Day 3 morning: pickup and investor demo that afternoon.

Result: 72‑hour delivery, all materials in hand, and the company secured a $500K seed round. Total spend was ~$850 for boxes, posters, and cards — a textbook example of time value outweighing unit price differences.

Common objections, answered

“Unit price is higher — is it worth it?”

Yes, in small-batch or urgent scenarios. A 30–50% unit-price premium is often offset by:

  • Earlier launch: saving 5–8 days can generate incremental revenue that exceeds the premium.
  • No overbuy: order exactly what you need; avoid surplus stock and sunk cash.
  • Lower rework risk: in-person proofing reduces print or finish surprises.

“Is distributed, multi‑location production really efficient?”

For multi‑store campaigns with tight deadlines, local production beats cross‑country freight. While centralized plants can be ~20% cheaper for 10,000‑unit homogenous runs, distributed printing wins on speed for small, multi‑city drops — and cuts freight complexity and lead time.

Move fast with FedEx Office printing services: a simple playbook

  • Step 1 — Prep or consult: bring a PDF or AI file, or meet a store designer for a 15–30 minute alignment.
  • Step 2 — Proof: request a same‑day physical sample to lock materials, color, and finishing.
  • Step 3 — Produce: approve and schedule your run; typical small batches complete in 24–48 hours.
  • Step 4 — Pickup/Deliver: collect locally or use courier delivery; many urban stores are within ~5 miles.
  • Step 5 — Iterate: reorder or refine based on live feedback without excess inventory.

Practical examples (tying to common requests)

  • Catalogs and booklets: Need a utility enclosure catalog (e.g., a quazite box catalog)? FedEx Office can print saddle‑stitched or perfect‑bound booklets with quick local proofing.
  • Premium packaging prototypes: Exploring a luxury jewelry package inspired by the look of a lagos jewelry box? Use small‑batch runs to validate dielines, materials, and finishing before scaling.
  • Instruction cards and posters: Clinics often print quick reference cards like “how to take manual blood pressure.” FedEx Office can output small cards and large-format posters for training walls.
  • Events and displays: Leverage FedEx Office large format printing for booth backdrops, foam boards, and outdoor banners alongside your packaging.

Note: Brand references are examples of print use cases; no brand affiliation or endorsement is implied.

See also Is Digital Inkjet Right for Same‑Day Poster Runs in Europe?

ROI check: the speed dividend

Assume your new product generates ~$150/day in gross margin after launch. If FedEx Office shaves 5–8 days compared with an online path, that’s $750–$1,200 in incremental margin. In many cases, this exceeds the unit-price premium on a 300‑unit pilot — and you avoid the risk of overbuying 500+ boxes before the design is final.

See also Is Hybrid and UV‑LED Printing the Real Future of Custom Packaging?

Why the nationwide network matters

With 2,000+ U.S. locations and service coverage across all 50 states, FedEx Office compresses response time at every step: walk‑in consultation (~15 minutes), sample printing (~30 minutes), and local pickup or delivery in ~48 hours for common small‑batch packaging and collateral. For multi‑store brands, files can be uploaded once, routed to local stores near each destination, and produced in parallel — turning a 7–10 day freight plan into a 1–2 day local rollout.

See also Digital Label & Sticker Printing to Grow 7–9% by 2026: Sustainable Design Takes the Brief

Takeaway

If you’re testing a new package, preparing for a trade show, or synchronizing materials across locations, prioritize TCO over unit price. For small-batch, time‑sensitive packaging, FedEx Office’s one‑stop model, in‑person proofing, and nationwide network frequently deliver the fastest path to market — with the lowest real total cost.

See also Why 95% of B2B and B2C Businesses Rave About Packola Custom Logo Packaging Solutions
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Jane Smith

I’m Jane Smith, a senior content writer with over 15 years of experience in the packaging and printing industry. I specialize in writing about the latest trends, technologies, and best practices in packaging design, sustainability, and printing techniques. My goal is to help businesses understand complex printing processes and design solutions that enhance both product packaging and brand visibility.

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