At the BPIF AGM last month, outgoing president Rupert
Middleton talked about the need for printing to be recognised as the sort of ‘advanced
manufacturing' sector that government departments get excited about and are
actively interested in.
To that end the federation has produced a brochure:
Printing in the 21st century - beyond advanced manufacturing. It
contains nine case studies, and each vignette makes for an interesting read in
its own way.
As it happens, Halstan (which just purchased the former
Pindar cartography business), and Lettershop (mentioned in yesterday's blog in
terms of the firm's innovation and expertise with inkjet technology) are among
those featured. The others are ProCo (PrintWeek's reigning
Company of the Year), Linney Group, Communisis, Newsprinters, GI Solutions, Denny Bros and
Ryedale Group.
While it calls to mind the sort of perennial debate viz printing as manufacturing versus service industry, there's no getting away from the fact that printing things involves making stuff. I'm always a fan of things that remind people of just
how clever and sophisticated this printing lark actually is, and I found many
fascinating snippets in the publication about the advances being made by these businesses of very
different sizes and shape.
It's good to know that the BPIF is propagating the
information among those aforementioned government departments, too. Get hold of
your own copy by calling 0845 250 7050 or download it from www.britishprint.com (it's number two on
the rotating home page elements at the time of typing).