Kennesaw, Ga. - Millennium Press, Agawam, Mass. installed
its first Heidelberg press a decade ago and its most recent - a
6-color Heidelberg Speedmaster XL 75 with Prinect Press Center and
Prinect Peak Performance Package - in 2007. In between, in a
prescient move, the company added Heidelberg's Prinect Prinance
MIS, as well as a Suprasetter 75 thermal CtP system with Prinect
Printready prepress workflow (since upgraded to Prinect Prepress
Manager). It has continued to extend and build its suite of Prinect
workflow solutions in modular fashion to become the first fully
"Prinected" print shop (MIS to press with web connectivity to
Millennium customers) in the U.S. last year.
In addition to Prinect Prepress Manager, recent
installations and upgrades include Prinect Remote Access; Prinect
Integration Manager; Prinect Pressroom Manager; Prinect Archive
System; Prinect Digital Print Manager; and Prinect Scheduler. The
company has also installed the new Prinect Press Center with Wall
Screen application, and currently is evaluating the addition of
Heidelberg's Prinect Postpress Manager to integrate its finishing
machines fully into the workflow. It also reports a steady increase
in web-based ordering of "basic" printed products (business cards,
postcards, flyers, and so on) via the Prinect Direct Access
customer portal.
All in A Day's Work - And That's the Point
According to Millennium's president, Jim Sullivan, the
company's ambitious growth strategy called for the automation of as
many process steps as possible in order to accomplish more work
more efficiently and in less time - without hiring additional sales
staff and without incurring any degradation in quality. Heidelberg
Prinect modules are now so tightly integrated into the company's
workflow, that the company can handle "rush" jobs quickly and
easily, without having to reshuffle its job queue or reschedule
other work. Sullivan recently shared the details of one such
"ordinary" job.
Around 8 a.m. one Wednesday morning, Sullivan said, he was
in the office working on an estimate when the web connect logo in
Prinect Direct Access started to flash, indicating that Millennium
had just received a shopping cart order for 20,000 4/4+AQ 8.5x11
flyers on 100# Gloss Text, cut and boxed. A PDF was supplied with
the order. "We need the order today because it is being inserted
into the newspaper," the customer noted. "If you can't do it,
don't proceed."
At this point, Sullivan reported, "I knew the job was
doable. After bringing the customer-supplied PDF into Prepress
Manager, we RIPped the file and supplied the customer with an
automated proof via Prinect Remote Access. It was quickly approved,
after which the job was off to Meta Dimension to create an
imposition proof." When the proof was output, however, Sullivan
noticed that the customer's geometry was off on the second page. No
problem, he explained. "We simply opened the PDF in Prepress
Manager, made a quick adjustment, and sent the file for plating."
Millennium's fully automated Suprasetter 75 with
multi-cassette loader ran the plates (Heidelberg Saphira
Chem-free), while the pressman finished the current job and set up
the new one according to the electronic JDF job ticket he had
already received from Prepress Manager. Subsequently, "The job - a
5,000 sheet run per side - was a piece of cake on our Peak
Performance Speedmaster XL 75," Sullivan continued. "We ran the
first side, loaded it into our POLAR pile turner and back onto
press for the second side. We ran the job as a work-and-turn to
save on makereadies and plates." Last stop for the job was
Millennium's Polar 115XT Autotrim. After boxing the flyers, "We
called the customer for pickup at our dock just 3 hours and 49
minutes after the order was received," Sullivan said. "They thought
we were joking!"
Sullivan had these further observations:
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No CSR was involved. Because the DirectAccess shopping
cart was used, "The job specifications were already loaded and
the estimate linked to those specifications, so the customer knew
the price up front."
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The job was in prepress for less than 10 minutes. "Had the
customer's geometry been correct, even less time would have been
needed."
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The Suprasetter 105 MCL ran unsupervised, thanks to the
platesetter's automatic loading and stacking features.
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Just one operator was required to man the Speedmaster SM 75
Peak Performance Press with Inpress control, "one of the most
amazing products to hit the press since the introduction of
closed-loop, color-reading systems," Sullivan said. "It takes the
pressman's focus off the task of watching color so he can
concentrate on overall sheet quality."
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Cutting data was sent automatically from Prinect Prepress
Manager to Millennium's Compucut software to the POLAR 115XT
Autotrim knife, saving time, lowering costs, and enabling
uninterrupted production.
While Sullivan is careful to point out that the referenced job
"flowed through the plant in the normal course of business" without
disrupting or displacing ongoing work, Millennium's embrace of
computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) as packaged by Prinect
clearly has been the key to the company's burgeoning production
capacity and its ability to do more with less. "At Millennium, we
believe that CIM is the future of print, and we prove it every day
in a real manufacturing environment, on live jobs with real
deadlines," Sullivan said.
Real-World Integration with Prinect
Prinect is a collection of more than 25 Heidelberg solutions
that covers everything from print shop management, online customer
connection, prepress and digital print workflow to makeready
optimization, color, quality, machine operation, and a full range
of services. By integrating the traditionally discrete areas of
management, prepress, press and postpress, Prinect solutions offer
greater transparency, create more efficient production workflows,
and increase profitability for growth-oriented printshops.
Heidelberg is the only manufacturer to offer a print shop workflow
that integrates and manages the entire print production process.
Located in Agawam, Mass., the 18-employee, $3.5 million
Millennium Press recently celebrated 20 successful years in
business. The company serves a regional client base located
throughout New England.
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen
A technology provider and partner in the print media industry
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG (Heidelberg) is with its
sheetfed offset printing machines one of the leading solution
providers for the print media industry. All over the world, the
name Heidelberg is synonymous with state-of-the art technology, top
quality, and closeness to the customer. The core business of this
technology group covers the whole value-added and process chain for
the 35 x 50 cm (13.78 x 19.69 in) to 121 x 162 cm (47.64 x 63.78
in) format classes in the sheetfed offset sector.
Heidelberg develops and produces precision printing presses,
platesetters, postpress equipment, and software for integrating all
the printshop processes. Environmental protection has an enduring
importance in this regard. Solutions for the development,
production, and utilization of presses help to conserve resources,
reduce emissions, and cut wastage. The Heidelberg portfolio also
provides general and consulting services ranging from spare parts
and consumables to the sale of remarketed equipment, and training
at the Print Media Academy.
Based in Heidelberg, Germany, with development and production
sites in seven countries and around 250 sales offices across the
globe, the company supports around 200,000 customers worldwide. All
Heidelberg presses destined for the world market are manufactured
at the Wiesloch-Walldorf site in line with strict quality
standards. Standardized presses in all standard format classes and
folding machines for the Chinese market are produced by Heidelberg
in Qingpu near Shanghai.
Heidelberg presses worldwide produce high-quality print
products such as business cards, brochures, posters, and folding
cartons.
In financial year 2008/2009, Heidelberg recorded sales of EUR
2.999 billion. As at March 31, 2009, the Heidelberg Group had a
workforce of 18,926 worldwide, including 707 trainees.
Media contact:
Jean-Marie Hershey
540-297-3556
jmh@writehandcom.com