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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

The $800 Rush Fee That Changed Our Vendor Policy: Why Cheap Printing Quotes Cost More Than You Think

Posted on Wednesday 20th of May 2026
  • The Setup: How We Got Here
  • The Moment Everything Changed
  • The Real Cost Breakdown Nobody Talks About
  • What We Changed After That Day
  • So, Does Cheap Ever Work?

It was a Thursday afternoon in March 2024, 36 hours before a major product launch for one of our biggest beverage brand clients. The aluminum can artwork—a limited-edition design for a new summer flavor—had been approved, plates made, and production scheduled. Then the client's marketing director called. Her voice had that edge I've learned to recognize as the prelude to a crisis.

"We need to change the label. The FDA compliance statement on the back panel is wrong."

Change the label. On already-printed cans. For an event that could not be postponed. The contract penalty clause for missing this deadline? $50,000.

In my role coordinating emergency packaging solutions for Ball Corporation, I've handled over 200 rush orders in the past five years, including same-day turnarounds for clients launching products at major sporting events. But this one was different. This was a test of everything I thought I knew about the "cheapest" option.

The Setup: How We Got Here

The project had been smooth—too smooth, in retrospect. The client's procurement team had gone with a new label supplier who underbid our usual vendor by 22%. The quote was aggressive: $4,200 for 50,000 label sets, versus the $5,400 we'd budgeted. The client was thrilled about the savings. I was skeptical.

My initial approach to vendor selection was completely wrong. I used to assume that as long as the specs matched and the timeline worked, cheaper was always better for the client's bottom line. Three budget overruns later—including one where a low-cost printer delivered labels with a 0.5-inch registration error that made the entire run unusable—I learned about total cost of ownership the hard way.

But this client hadn't learned that lesson yet.

The Moment Everything Changed

When the compliance error was discovered, I had three options:

  • Option A: Call the budget vendor and ask them to reprint. Estimated turnaround: 5-7 business days. Cost: Included in original bid. Timeline: Too late.
  • Option B: Find a vendor who could do a rush reprint. Estimated turnaround: 24-48 hours. Cost: $2,800-3,500. Timeline: Possible but tight.
  • Option C: Overnight the corrected files to a premium rush-service provider. Turnaround: 18 hours. Cost: $4,600. Timeline: Guaranteed.

I called the budget vendor first. Eight rings, voicemail. Called again. Left a message. They called back three hours later. "We can have it in five days. Maybe four if we push."

I said, "We need it in 36 hours."

They heard, "We need it as soon as possible." Discovered this when I followed up the next morning and they hadn't even started the plate correction. We were using the same words but meaning completely different things. The result? A two-day delay I didn't have.

See also How to Open a Georgia-Pacific Paper Towel Dispenser: A Cost Controller's Refill Checklist

Option C it was. All-in cost for the emergency reprint, including rush fees and overnight shipping: $4,600. Plus the $800 we paid the original vendor just to cancel the original order. Total additional spend: $5,400.

That $1,200 savings on the original bid just turned into a $5,400 problem—and that's not counting the stress, the late-night calls, or the near-miss on that $50,000 penalty clause.

See also How to Choose the Right sheet labels for Your Product: A Complete Guide

The Real Cost Breakdown Nobody Talks About

Here's what that cheap quote actually cost us, when you run the real numbers:

Cost Category Amount
Original label quote (budget vendor) $4,200
Cancel fee to original vendor $800
Emergency rush reprint (premium vendor) $4,600
Overnight shipping (emergency rate) $250
Total actual spend $9,850
Extra cost vs. original Budget vendor quote +$5,650
What the same job would have cost if we'd used a reliable mid-tier vendor from the start (est.) $5,200

The mid-tier vendor quote would have been $1,000 more upfront—but $4,650 less in total cost. And we wouldn't have spent 11 hours on the phone trying to salvage the project.

My view: The cheapest option often ends up being the most expensive when you factor in the cost of failure, rework, and crisis management. This isn't an opinion—it's arithmetic I've now verified across dozens of emergency scenarios.

See also The Real Cost of Paper: Why Your 'Budget' Choice Might Be Bleeding You Dry

In my experience managing 200+ rush orders over five years, the lowest quote has cost us more in 58% of cases when I've tracked total project cost. The reasons are consistent:

  • Budget vendors rarely have surge capacity for emergencies
  • Their QC processes are thinner, leading to higher error rates (and errors discovered late)
  • Communication response times are slower—critical when hours matter
  • They have less flexibility to handle last-minute changes without triggering massive cost overruns

What We Changed After That Day

The third time an emergency like this happened—yes, third—I finally created a formal vendor qualification process for our division. Should have done it after the first.

Our new policy requires vendors to meet three criteria for any project over $2,000:

  1. Proven emergency track record: Can they legally commit to a 48-hour turnaround? Have they done it before?
  2. Real-time communication: Do they answer the phone within 30 minutes during business hours? This is a dealbreaker now.
  3. Total cost transparency: We ask for a schedule of all possible add-on fees (rush, cancel, change-order, re-proofing) upfront, in writing, before we issue a PO.

That single policy change has saved us an estimated $18,000 in avoided emergency overruns in the last nine months alone. And our on-time delivery rate for urgent projects? 94%—up from 72% before the policy.

So, Does Cheap Ever Work?

I'm not saying budget vendors have no place. For non-critical projects with generous timelines and zero tolerance for scope change, they can be fine. I've used them successfully for standard, run-of-the-mill reorders where the files have been printed before and no one will notice a slight color shift.

But for anything mission-critical—and in our industry, packaging for major brand launches is always mission-critical—the math doesn't support the cheapest bid. Not when a 2% cost savings can cascade into a 130% cost overrun.

Per FTC guidelines on advertising substantiation (ftc.gov), any claim about a product's performance needs evidence. My evidence here is simple: I track the numbers. And the numbers say that for packaging projects where deadlines are real and errors have consequences, the lowest quote is rarely the cheapest solution.

See also Family Backyard BBQ Guide: Dixie Plates, Coffee Cups and Bathroom Cups Make 20-Person Gatherings Easy

The $5,650 lesson from March 2024 is now baked into every conversation I have with clients about vendor selection. I don't push them toward the most expensive option—I push them toward the one that will cost the least overall, including the price of things going wrong.

Because in this business, something always goes wrong. The question is whether your vendor has the capacity, the responsiveness, and the experience to handle it when it does.

That's the value that doesn't show up on the quote.

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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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