'Own Your IP' Isn’t a Slogan. It’s a Survival Strategy for Print.
I’ve been saying this for a while now and the reactions are always the same.
The deer-in-the-headlights look, or the quiet smirk from IT that says, “We’ve got this covered.”
That’s exactly why this needs to be said louder. Print and packaging don’t have an AI adoption problem. They have an ownership problem.
Every time a print organization uses AI without control — generic copilots, black-box features, vendor-trained models — you’re not adopting intelligence.
You’re exporting it.
- Your estimating logic.
- Your production tradeoffs.
- Your workflow decisions.
- Your customer-specific nuances.
That’s not just “data.” That’s intellectual property.
And if that knowledge isn’t embedded in models you control, it’s training someone else’s future.
At Davos this year, Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, didn’t talk about bigger models, faster chips, or where data lives.
He talked about model sovereignty.
Translation:
If you don’t own the AI models that embed your knowledge, you’re leaking enterprise value, every day.
That should scare you. Because in print, it’s already happening.
Print Is Rich in IP — and Dangerously Casual with It
Print and packaging companies are sitting on decades of hard-earned intelligence:
- Estimating logic refined through pain.
- Production tradeoffs learned the hard way.
- Scheduling decisions shaped by real constraints.
- Customer nuances no generic model can infer.
That’s not “data.” That’s IP.
And yet much of the industry is feeding that knowledge into:
- Generic copilots.
- Vendor platforms.
- Black-box AI features.
… without ever asking who owns what comes out the other side.
You’re not just using AI. You’re training it. The problem? You don’t own what it learns.
This is why PRINTING AI has been clear from the start:
Own your IP. Stop feeding the machine.
Because here’s the uncomfortable truth no one likes to say out loud:
- Using AI is not owning AI.
- Security is not sovereignty.
- Efficiency without IP is value leakage.
AI doesn’t care about your org chart. It doesn’t care about your title.
And it doesn’t care how long you’ve been doing things a certain way (something I hear every day).
It learns from what you give it.
If the intelligence created inside your business doesn’t stay with your business, you don’t have an AI strategy.
You have a dependency.
The companies that win the next decade in print and packaging won’t be the ones with the most tools.
They’ll be the ones who can answer this question without hesitation:
If AI left tomorrow, what intelligence would still be ours?
If that question makes you uncomfortable, good. That discomfort is your signal.
Relevance isn’t rented. It’s built. And it starts with ownership.
If this still sounds theoretical, you’re probably the one feeding the machine.
- Categories:
- Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Amy Servi-Bonner is the Vice President, Consulting - Applied AI & Printing Technology, at PRINTING United. With over 25 years of experience in technology leadership and consulting, Servi-Bonner brings deep expertise in ERP systems, digital transformation, and AI strategy. She holds an Executive Degree in AI Strategy and Governance from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, as well as an MBA in Finance from Webster University. Her combination of technical acumen, consulting background, and knowledge of the printing and packaging sector uniquely positions her to guide companies through the next era of transformation.





