Schätzl Druck
Case study
Schätzl Druck increases print
volumes with HP PrintOS Site Flow
Site Flow oers end-to-end global production management for
medium to high volume print service providers
Industry
General Commercial Printer
Objective
With the addition of the HP Indigo 10000 Digital
Press, Schätzl Druck wanted a single solution
to connect customer order submission to order
dispatch, while maximizing press use without
creating bottlenecks. It needed an Application
Program Interface (API) that would be easy for
web-developers and its customers to connect.
Critically, Schätzl Druck also needed to grow job
volume without increasing sta headcount
Approach
Deciding that a proprietary system would be too
costly and time-consuming to develop and maintain,
Schätzl Druck explored the market for appropriate
software, and used the HP Indigo community to
source a solution
IT matters
Schätzl Druck installed OneFlow Cloud (now known
as PrintOS Site Flow) from OneFlow Systems, an
end-to-end production management system, and
established solution in use at PSPs around the world
and handling thousands of orders each day at PSPs
around the world
Business matters
The company was able to take its annual job count from
30,000 to 230,000 without creating bottlenecks. It also
reduced the number sta needed to pack and ship over
12,000 orders during a peak day by a factor of ve
“With the addition of our HP Indigo 10000 Digital Press, we
wanted a zero-touch solution for low copy jobs that would
help us make the most of its capacity and increase margins.”
– Ulrich Schätzl, managing director, Schätzl Druck
Seamless integration between order submission and dispatch
Managing the workow of digital presses capable of printing
tens of thousands of jobs per day has been a challenge for print
service providers (PSPs). Whether home-grown or bought-in,
solutions took time to integrate and often led to a fragile
web of connections that communicated unreliably.
Schätzl Druck’s experience of Site Flow has solved its
internal production management needs, and opened
it to the world for low-copy business.