Yesterday’s Playbook Won’t Win Tomorrow’s Game
In my opinion, there’s no shortage of opportunity in the printing industry right now. Hear me out. Markets are continuing to shift, technologies are accelerating, and customer needs are evolving in real time. But here’s the part that keeps me up at night when I think about some of the businesses that I see. These opportunities don’t look like anything like the ones they’ve chased three, five or 10 years ago. And if the companies are still running the same playbook as then, they’re not just standing still but actually falling behind.
The market has changed; your customers have evolved and technology is accelerating. Is your playbook keeping up?
Staying ahead of the curve is not a one-time event, but a discipline. It means committing to being a learning environment within your company. And this is not for a select few and not just for your team but starting with yourself. As the owner, you are the person most responsible for knowing where the market is headed. That means reading, asking questions, attending events, and just being curious enough to challenge your own assumptions. Remember, “we know what we know.” And what we know is made up of a collection of where we’ve been, where we’ve worked, what we listen to, what we read, who we hang out with, and how we spend our time. The moment you think you’ve got it all figured out, boy oh boy does the market have a way of reminding you that you don’t!
It also means staying close to your best customers, really close. Not just reviewing what they ordered last quarter but having real conversations about where their business is headed, what pressures they are facing, and what problem(s) do they wish someone could solve for them, (someone like you?). Your customers are one of the best early warning systems you might have. And if you’re listening, they’ll tell you where the next opportunity is long before you would’ve found it on your own.
And now here’s the hard part: being willing to reinvent or pivot your business. I’m not talking about blowing everything up that is working. I’m talking about having the intellectual honesty and the guts to look at the portion of your business and say, “this served as well, but it’s not going to take us where we need to go.” That kind of thinking takes courage. It also takes a healthy ego, one that is grounded enough to accept that past success does not guarantee future relevance. As Pink Floyd would say, don’t get caught “basking in the glory of yesterday’s triumphs.”
Business transformation is not just a destination, but it’s a posture you can take. It’s the willingness to remain uncomfortable enough to keep growing. Some owners wait until they’re forced to change and by then the window has narrowed considerably and they’re on their heels. The ones who stay ahead, make change an intentional ongoing part of how they operate. They don’t reinvent for the sake of it, they reinvent because they’ve done their homework and listened to their customers. They’ve concluded that the next version of their business has to look different.
So where can you start? I’d recommend a few honest questions. Are you actively learning on purpose, and not just by accident? Are you having the kind of conversations with your customers that go deeper than the last job they sent you? Is there a part of your business that you’ve been protecting out of habit rather than strategy? If you’d answered yes to any of these, it might be time to take a hard look at what needs to change.
The opportunities are real. The market is moving. The question is whether you are moving with it, or waiting for yesterday’s playbook to start working again. It won’t. It never does.
Mike Philie helps owners and CEOs in the Graphic Communications Industry validate what’s working, identify what needs to change, and create a practical path forward.
PhilieGroup | mphilie@philiegroup.com | LinkedIn
The preceding content was provided by a contributor unaffiliated with Printing Impressions. The views expressed within may not directly reflect the thoughts or opinions of the staff of Printing Impressions. Artificial Intelligence may have been used in part to create or edit this content.
Mike Philie leverages his 28 years of direct industry experience in sales, sales management and executive leadership to share what’s working for companies today and how to safely transform your business. Since 2007, he has been providing consulting services to privately held printing and mailing companies across North America.
Mike provides strategy and insight to owners and CEOs in the graphic communications industry by providing direct and realistic assessments, not being afraid to voice the unpopular opinion, and helping leaders navigate change through a common sense and practical approach.






