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A Real-World Checklist for Ordering Business Cards, Flyers, and Posters Online

Posted on Friday 27th of February 2026

A Real-World Checklist for Ordering Business Cards, Flyers, and Posters Online

Office administrator for a 150-person professional services firm. I manage all office supplies and marketing material ordering—roughly $25,000 annually across 8 vendors. I report to both operations and finance. When I took over purchasing in 2020, I made every mistake in the book trying to save a buck. Now, I have a checklist. This is it.

This list is for anyone who needs to get business cards, flyers, or posters printed online without the headache. It’s not about finding the absolute cheapest option; it’s about getting what you need, when you need it, without blowing your budget or your afternoon on customer service calls.

Here are the 5 steps I follow for every single print order. It looks like a lot, but once you run through it a few times, it takes 15 minutes tops and saves you from 90% of the common problems.

Step 1: Define the “Non-Negotiables” Before You Even Look at a Website

People jump straight to comparing prices. That’s a mistake. The price is meaningless until you lock down three things: quantity, deadline, and quality tier.

Quantity: Be Realistic, Not Optimistic

Don’t just guess. For business cards, how many employees need them? For a flyer or poster for an event, how many people are you realistically expecting? A good rule of thumb I learned the hard way: order 10-15% more than your “perfect scenario” number. Running out looks worse than having a small box of leftovers. Saved $50 by ordering the “exact” number of event flyers. Ended up spending $180 on a last-minute rush reprint when we had 20 more walk-ins than expected. Net loss: $130 and a lot of stress.

Deadline: Work Backwards from the “In-Hand” Date

This is critical. When do you physically need the items? Not when you’d like them shipped. Count backwards:

  • In-Hand Date: The day the box needs to be on your desk.
  • Minus Shipping Time: Usually 3-5 business days for ground.
  • Minus Production Time: The printer’s stated turnaround (e.g., “5-7 business days”).
  • Minus Proofing/Approval Buffer: At least 1-2 days for you to review the digital proof.

The date you land on is your “latest possible order date.” Order at least a day before that.

Quality Tier: Good, Better, Best

Not everything needs premium 32pt cardstock with a soft-touch coating. Define the purpose. Internal meeting handouts? “Good” (standard paper, basic finish) is fine. Client-facing sales collateral? That’s “Better” or “Best.” This decision will narrow your vendor options and price range immediately.

Step 2: Prepare Your Files Like a Pro (This is Where Most People Fail)

From the outside, it looks like you just upload a PDF. The reality is that 75% of delays are due to file issues. This step prevents your order from getting stuck in “prepress limbo.”

Check the Bleed and Safe Zone

If your design has color or images that go to the edge of the page, you need a bleed. This is extra background (usually 0.125") that gets trimmed off. If you don’t include it, you might get a thin white border. The safe zone is the area well inside the trim line where all critical text and logos should stay to avoid being cut off. Your printer’s website will have templates. Use them.

Convert Fonts to Outlines & Embed Images

I’m not a graphic designer, so I can’t speak to the finer points of color spaces. What I can tell you from an admin perspective is this: if the printer doesn’t have the font you used, your text will default to something like Times New Roman. To avoid this, in your design software (like Adobe Illustrator or even Canva), convert all text to “outlines” or “paths.” This turns text into a shape. Also, make sure all images are embedded in the file, not linked.

Save as a Print-Ready PDF

Don’t send a JPG, PNG, or a Word doc. Export or “Save As” a PDF. In the settings, look for “High Quality Print” or “PDF/X-1a” preset. This bundles everything together correctly.

Step 3: Get and Compare Real Quotes (Not Just Sticker Prices)

Now you can shop. But you’re not just comparing the big number on the product page.

Build the Full Cart

Add your exact specs (size, paper, quantity, finish) to the cart on 2-3 different sites. Go all the way to the checkout page to see the total cost. This includes:

  • Base product price
  • Setup fees (many online printers have eliminated these, but some still exist for complex jobs)
  • Shipping and handling (this can vary wildly)
  • Taxes
“Total cost of ownership (i.e., not just the unit price but all associated costs). The lowest quoted price often isn’t the lowest total cost.”

Decode the Turnaround Promise

Look for the difference between “production time” and “ship time.” Some vendors quote “5-7 business days” for production, then ship. Others say “5-7 business days total turnaround.” The second is usually better. Also, note if the clock starts when you order or when you approve the proof. (It’s usually after proof approval).

Sniff Out the “Too Good to Be True”

If one quote is dramatically lower than the others, ask why. Is the paper weight lighter? Is it a “economy” paper instead of “premium”? Are they calculating shipping later? Read the fine print. Learned never to assume ‘same specifications’ mean identical results after receiving business cards that felt like tissue paper from a ‘budget’ vendor, while the mid-priced ones were perfect.

Step 4: The Proof Review – Don’t Just Glance at It

This is your last chance to catch errors. The vendor will send a digital proof (a PDF). Do not approve it from your phone.

See also Berry Global Login & Business Credit Cards: A Practical Guide for Admin Buyers
See also Digital Printing vs Flexographic Printing: Choosing the Right Path for Flexible Food Packaging

Review on a Proper Screen

Open the PDF on a computer monitor. Zoom in to 100% or 200%. Check every single piece of text for typos. Verify phone numbers, email addresses, and URLs letter by letter. Have a second person do this independently. It’s amazing what you miss when you’ve been staring at the same design for days.

Understand What a Digital Proof Can’t Show

Honestly, I’m not sure why some colors shift between screen and print. My best guess is it comes down to monitor calibration vs. ink. A digital proof shows layout and text, but it cannot accurately show exact color, foil stamping, or texture. For color-critical items, some vendors offer a hard-copy “press proof” for an extra fee. For most business cards and flyers, the digital proof is sufficient if your expectations are managed.

Approve or Mark Up Clearly

If everything is correct, hit “Approve.” If there’s a change needed, use the vendor’s online markup tool or send a very clear email with the exact change (e.g., “Page 1: Change phone number from 555-0100 to 555-0110”). Avoid saying “the blue looks off” – be specific if you can.

See also Optimizing Large-Format Inkjet for Poster Printing: Speed, Color, and Waste Control

Step 5: Post-Order Logistics & The “Just In Case” Plan

Your job isn’t done when you click “Pay Now.”

Track the Order and Shipping

Save the order confirmation and tracking number. Set a calendar reminder for the expected delivery date. If the tracking shows a delay, contact the vendor immediately. Don’t wait until the day you need the items.

See also contact

Inspect Upon Delivery

When the box arrives, open it. Check the quantity. Look for obvious damage, major color inconsistencies, or cutting errors. Do this right away. Most vendors have a short window (like 72 hours) to report problems for a free reprint.

Have a Contingency for Mission-Critical Items

For must-have items like conference handouts or event signage, what’s your Plan B? This could mean:

See also How to Choose the Right Substrate for Your Brand
  • Paying for expedited shipping from the start for peace of mind.
    “The value of guaranteed turnaround isn't the speed—it's the certainty. For event materials, knowing your deadline will be met is often worth more than a lower price with 'estimated' delivery.”
  • Knowing which local print shop can do a 24-hour turnaround in a true emergency (and what it will cost).
  • Having a simple digital version ready to display on screens if physical materials don’t arrive.

Common Pitfalls to Sidestep

A few final notes from the school of hard knocks:

  • Don’t Assume Templates Are Perfect: That free barber flyer template or dental office manual PDF you downloaded? It probably doesn’t have bleed set up. You’ll need to adjust it in Google Docs or another program before it’s print-ready.
  • Promo Codes are Great, But… Always check the terms. A “gotprint promo code” for 20% off might exclude sale items or have a minimum order. Apply the code early in your cart building to see the real final price.
  • Communicate with Your Team: If you’re ordering for someone else (a department head, a marketer), send them the digital proof for approval and get it in writing (an email is fine). This covers you if they later say “this isn’t what I wanted.”

Following this checklist won’t make you a printing expert. But it will make you someone who gets their print orders right, on time, and on budget. And in my world, that’s what matters.

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Jane Smith

I’m Jane Smith, a senior content writer with over 15 years of experience in the packaging and printing industry. I specialize in writing about the latest trends, technologies, and best practices in packaging design, sustainability, and printing techniques. My goal is to help businesses understand complex printing processes and design solutions that enhance both product packaging and brand visibility.

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