Why manual order processing is the real ceiling on print growth

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Every print business hits a ceiling eventually, and it’s rarely the press that puts it there.

Every growing print business eventually hits a limit that has nothing to do with equipment. The press can take more work. The process between order and production cannot, and that is where the real ceiling sits.

It shows up in the checking, the re-keying, the approval chasing, the file fixing, the payment matching, and every handoff that turns a straightforward job into a slow one. For a while, the business absorbs it. The best people take it on. Then the work grows, and the exception becomes the process.

The gap between busy and productive

PRINTING United Alliance’s 2025 research found that 79% of commercial printers still have little or no automation in place, even though workflow investment sits near the top of their capital priorities. Businesses already know they need it. The gap is how long a business can keep asking skilled people to do work the system should already be doing.

79%
of commercial printers have little or no automation in place, despite workflow investment being a top capital priority

That is how manual work survives: disguised as staff simply being busy.

What does manual order processing actually cost a print business?

The cost rarely shows up as a single number on a spreadsheet. It shows up in three places at once.

50+ hours
Manual work, eliminated weekly
Sun Print Solutions lost more than 50 hours a week to repetitive B2B orders being re-keyed by hand.
10 hours
Lost before production starts
A commercial printer we spoke with measured 15 minutes of intake per job. At 40 jobs a day, that is a full working day gone before a single job reaches the press.
10%
Orders needing manual rescue
The share of orders at another printer we spoke with that stopped because a file needed fixing or a customer needed chasing. The clock starts again every time.

None of this looks dramatic enough on its own to trigger alarm. Together, it is a full-time job that shouldn’t exist.

“When systems don’t talk to each other, you’re introducing extra steps at every turn. Manual re-entry for repetitive jobs, inventory managed in two places, customers waiting for information that should be instant.”

Rob Denton, Customer Success Manager, Infigo

The ceiling that shows up in what you can promise

The ceiling shows up most clearly in what a business can promise, and that is where the damage starts.

One operation said standard orders could take up to six hours to reach the press. Their target was under one. That gap is the story, and it has nothing to do with press speed. It is entirely the time spent getting ready to print.

AMS Print hit the same ceiling from a different angle. They could only take orders during business hours, and every one of them meant a manual round trip: contacting the customer, checking job details, chasing proofing and approval, before anything reached the press. Their busiest demand didn’t wait for office hours, and neither could their process, so evening orders simply waited until morning.

A customer does not care that the artwork was waiting for approval, or that payment had to be matched by hand, or that the job bag had to be assembled manually. They care that the answer came too late. Then they stop asking this supplier first. The issue was never production capacity. It was promise capacity.

What automation actually takes off people’s plates

The question underneath all of this usually gets phrased as headcount, when really it’s about how much of a skilled person’s day gets spent on work a system could handle instead.

One business described a future where 13 people involved in order processing could become one person overseeing the workflow, an admission of how much human energy the current model spends on tasks that don’t need human judgement at all.

An operations manager put the dream more plainly: no double keying, no re-entry, no one typing the same information twice because the process still demands it. Another owner said he wanted the most automated workflow in large format anywhere in the world, because he was tired of watching skilled people do repetitive work he knew they should not still be doing.

The real question

Not whether the business has enough people. It is what those people are still being asked to carry, and how much longer the business can keep paying talented staff to do work the system should have left behind.

Eventually, growth depends less on how many jobs the press can handle and more on how long the business can keep asking its best people to stand in for a system that should already exist.

Most of this traces back to how the original software decision got made. We’ve covered how commercial printers choose the wrong platform in the first place, and what storefront buyers say they’d change after living with the wrong one.

PRINTING UNITED 2026
The way print businesses make these decisions is about to change.
Be the first to see what’s coming from Infigo.

Frequently Asked Questions

Promise capacity is what a business can reliably commit to a customer: how fast an order will be ready, and how consistently that answer holds. It is different from production capacity, which is what the press can physically print. A business can have plenty of press capacity and still lose orders because the admin around production, checking, re-keying, chasing approvals, cannot keep up with what has been promised.

The press can usually take more work. The process between order and production often cannot. Every manual step, checking a file, re-keying a job, chasing an approval, matching a payment, adds time that does not scale. As order volume grows, these steps do not get faster. They just get repeated more often, until the admin around production becomes the actual ceiling on how much a business can promise.

It varies, but the cost is rarely small. Sun Print Solutions eliminated more than 50 hours of manual work a week once repetitive B2B orders stopped being re-keyed by hand. Costs like this are easy to miss because they do not appear as a single line on a spreadsheet. They show up as staff time that looks like normal busyness rather than avoidable work.

When ordering is manual, someone has to be available to check the file, match payment, and move the job forward. AMS Print found this directly: before automation, orders could only be accepted during business hours, so demand arriving in the evening simply waited until morning. Automating intake removes the dependency on someone being in the building to act on an order.

Not necessarily, and reframing it as a headcount question misses the point. The real question is what skilled people are still being asked to do. Several businesses have described a future where the same order volume needs far fewer people touching each job, not because roles are being cut, but because double keying, re-entry, and manual checking are removed from the process, freeing people for work that actually needs human judgement.

According to PRINTING United Alliance’s State of the Industry research, 79% of commercial printers still have little or no automation in place. Automation reduces headcount pressure by removing the repetitive steps between order and press, order intake, file checking, job routing, production handoff, so the same number of people can process more orders without the process depending on manual re-entry at every stage.

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