I’ve been listening to the phrase more often lately. Not from struggling companies. Not from organizations fighting for survival.
Ironically, I hear it most often from successful businesses. Businesses with talented employees. Strong customer relationships.
Good reputations. Decades of experience.
The phrase sounds harmless. “We’ve always done it this way.” And that’s exactly what makes it dangerous.
Most people don’t say it with arrogance. They say it with confidence. After all, if something has worked for years, why change it?
That’s a fair question.
It’s also one that has quietly limited the growth of more organizations than most leaders realize.
Throughout my career, I’ve had the opportunity to view business from several perspectives. I’ve been a buyer of printing services. I’ve owned print, media, and marketing companies. I’ve worked as a consultant, salesperson, educator, and business leader to print and graphics companies.
Those experiences have taught me something important: Success can be one of an organization’s greatest assets… and it can also become one of its biggest blind spots.
The printing, graphics, and visual communications industry has never been static. It has continually evolved. Technology changes. Customer expectations shift. Communication habits evolve. New competitors emerge. Business models adapt. 20 years ago, it was all about social media, and today it is about AI.
The organizations that thrive recognize this reality. The organizations that struggle often assume that what worked yesterday will continue to work tomorrow.
I recently spoke with a business leader who was frustrated by the slowing growth. The company had a strong reputation, quality equipment, loyal customers, and a talented team.
On the surface, everything looked healthy. As our conversation continued, a pattern emerged.
The company was still relying on many of the same approaches that had driven success for years. The sales process hadn’t changed much. Customer engagement looked familiar.
Strategic conversations focused more on preserving what existed than preparing for what was next.
The issue wasn’t effort. The issue was adaptation.
The market had changed. The organization had not.
I see similar situations when discussing technology.
Some leaders immediately dismiss automation, artificial intelligence, workflow improvements, or new communication tools because they seem unfamiliar.
Others approach those same opportunities with curiosity.
The difference isn’t technology. It’s a mindset.
The strongest organizations aren’t abandoning what made them successful. They’re building on it. There’s a significant difference.
Experience should provide a foundation, not a finish line.
As someone who has both sold and purchased printing and marketing services for many years, I can tell you that customers often make decisions differently than they once did.
Today, responsiveness matters more than ever. Communication matters.
Problem-solving matters. Strategic thinking matters. Trust matters.
Price still matters, but it is rarely the entire story.
The companies that consistently stand out aren’t simply producing printed materials. They’re helping customers solve problems, achieve objectives, strengthen brands, and communicate more effectively.
That’s a different conversation than simply selling print.
I’ve also noticed that “We’ve always done it this way” rarely travels alone. It usually arrives with a few familiar companions.
“That’s how we’ve always handled it.” Or… “Our customers don’t want that.” Or.. “We tried that once.” Or… “That won’t work here.”
Maybe.
Or maybe those statements deserve another look.
The print and graphics industry has reinvented itself repeatedly. Many companies that once defined themselves by ink-on-paper now offer marketing services, signage, wide-format graphics, fulfillment, packaging, promotional products, data-driven communications, and strategic solutions.
The businesses creating momentum today aren’t necessarily the largest.
They aren’t always the oldest. And they aren’t always the most well-funded.
They are often the most adaptable. They remain curious. They ask questions.
They challenge assumptions. They stay willing to learn. Most importantly, they understand that confidence and curiosity can coexist.
That’s where leadership matters most. Because every organization eventually reflects the mindset of its leadership. Its culture. Its communication.
Its willingness to innovate. Its ability to adapt. Its future.
The leaders I admire most never assume they have all the answers. They continue asking questions long after others stop.
What are we missing? What has changed? What are our customers experiencing?
What assumptions are we making that may no longer be true?
Those questions create growth. And they bring us back to the Leadership Mirror.
The mirror doesn’t care how long you’ve been in business. It doesn’t care how successful you’ve been. It doesn’t care what worked yesterday.
It simply reflects reality.
The companies that struggle most over the next five years won’t necessarily be the ones that lack talent, equipment, or opportunity.
They’ll be the ones who confuse experience with adaptability. And the mirror will reveal the difference.
So, the next time you hear someone say, “We’ve always done it this way,” pause for a moment.
Then ask yourself: Is that mindset protecting your success—or limiting your future?
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.
- Categories:
- Business Management - Operations






