If you lead a printing business, standing still is not an option. Technology evolves, customer expectations shift, and the competition never stops getter closer. Yet, many companies still hesitate to try something new because of one big fear: what if we fail?
The truth is that failure is part of growth. The difference between companies that thrive and those that stall often comes down to how they handle risk, learning, and resilience. That’s where agility, being curious, and having safety nets come in. Where do you think your business is on the risk spectrum: from the extreme of being on the bleeding edge of always trying new things, to we’ll only give up that rotary phone when they stop servicing it?
Agility: More Than Just Speed
Agility is not about chasing every shiny object or reacting to the loudest customer request. It’s about adapting quickly, making smart adjustments, and keeping momentum even when things feel uncertain. I relate to doing ground ball drills in a lacrosse team practice. It’s not the all-out speed, but the quickness and the ability to change directions on a dime that wins the contest.
In practice, agility in a printing company can look like:
- Quickly reshuffling a press schedule to handle a high-priority client campaign.
- Empowering staff to make on-the-spot decisions without layers of approvals.
- Using data and feedback loops to pivot when a process is not working.
Agility builds staff confidence and customer equity. Clients remember the supplier who “just figured it out,” and that reputation becomes a competitive advantage.
Curiosity: Fuel for Continuous Learning
Curiosity is the antidote to “we’ve always done it this way.” When leaders and teams approach challenges with curiosity, they look for possibilities instead of roadblocks. In leading sales teams, I always search out to see if there are any “sales prevention” departments or staff members that always begin their response with “we can’t do that.” Yikes!
Being a “student of the game” means asking:
- What don’t we know yet, and how can we learn it?
- How are others solving this challenge?
- What is one experiment we can run to test this idea?
A curious culture doesn’t punish questions; it celebrates them. This mindset sparks small, everyday innovations and new approaches to workflows. Use this to create client solutions, or smarter uses of technology that all add up over time.
Safety Nets: Making Failure Safe
No one likes to fail. But in a healthy organization, failure doesn’t equal punishment, it equals progress. Leaders can build safety nets by creating an environment where staff feel secure trying new approaches without worrying about career-limiting consequences. After all, how can you improve if you don’t try out new ideas?
Safety nets might include:
- Piloting an innovative technology with one client before rolling it out company wide.
- Building contingency plans so a single misstep doesn’t derail a project.
- Encouraging open discussion about “lessons learned” without finger-pointing.
When employees know, they won’t get burned for trying something different, they’re more likely to step up with fresh ideas, and some of those ideas can become real breakthroughs.
Putting It All Together
Agility keeps you moving forward. Curiosity ensures you’re always learning, and safety nets give your team confidence to try. Together, they create a culture where innovation isn’t a buzzword, it’s how you roll. And in an industry where change is the only constant, that culture may be your most important competitive advantage.
The Takeaway
Leaders in print don’t need to (and can’t) end uncertainty. They need to help their teams navigate it. By modeling agility, encouraging curiosity, and building safety nets, you empower employees to experiment, to adapt, and to grow. Because at the end of the day, the only real failure is standing still while the world goes by.
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