logo
  • Home
  • Menu
  • Contact
  • Order now

Original Lahore Kebab Norbury

Technology

Why I Switched from Local Print Shops to Hallmark for Our Company Cards (And Didn't Look Back)

Posted on Wednesday 24th of June 2026

It was February 2024, and I was staring at a pile of 400 misprinted holiday cards, trying to figure out how I was going to explain a $2,200 write-off to my CFO without sounding like I didn't know what I was doing. Not my finest moment.

I manage all the office supply and print ordering for a mid-sized company—roughly $45,000 annually across about 8 vendors. And for years, I'd been a loyal customer of a small local print shop. I assumed supporting local was the right thing to do, and I thought the personal touch meant I'd get better service. Turns out, I was wrong on both counts.

The Setup: Why I Stuck with Local for So Long

When I first started managing vendor relationships back in 2020, I assumed the lowest quote was always the best choice. But a string of quality issues taught me to look deeper. After a few bad experiences, I swung hard in the opposite direction: I decided that working with a 'person I could call' was worth paying extra for.

The local shop's owner, let's call him Mike, was great at first. He'd take my order for 200 custom greeting cards and say, "No problem, I'll get it done." But what I didn't see were the cracks. His invoicing system was a mess—handwritten receipts that my finance team kept kicking back. His turnaround time was '3-5 business days,' but it was more of a suggestion than a promise. And when I ordered 500 flyers for an event in Q3 2023, the color came out looking like a bruised banana. He said, "That's the paper, not me." I didn't have any leverage, so I paid and moved on.

It took me 3 years and about 150 orders to understand that vendor relationships matter more than vendor capabilities. But I had it backwards: a good relationship shouldn't mean accepting bad processes.

The Inciting Incident: When It All Fell Apart

Here's the thing: I probably would have stayed with Mike forever out of inertia. The devil you know, right? But in October 2023, we needed 400 boxed Christmas cards to send to clients. I placed the order in plenty of time—November 1st, with a 'must have by December 1st' deadline. Mike said, "Easy."

See also How a Fintech Startup Turned a Simple Business Card into a Brand Workhorse with Digital Printing

November 15th rolled around—nothing. I called. He said they were "on press." November 20th—he said he'd "have them ready by the 25th." On the 28th, I showed up at his shop to find 400 cards that were misaligned, with the crease completely off-center on about half of them. It wasn't a rush job; it was just sloppy.

I had to scramble. I found a local competitor who could do a rush order, but at a +60% premium. Total cost for the cards I actually used: $3,700. Plus, I had to eat the $2,200 from Mike's order because he refused a refund, claiming it was "within acceptable tolerances." My department budget took the hit, and I looked like an idiot to my VP.

See also Why Ball Corporation’s Aluminum Packaging Leadership Matters: LCA Proof, Factory Precision, and Real-World Brand Wins

The Search: Finding a Better Way

After that disaster, I was pissed. And embarrassed. And I swore I'd find a vendor who didn't make me feel like I was gambling with the company's money. I needed three things: consistent quality, clear pricing (including all the hidden setup costs), and a process that didn't rely on one guy's memory.

See also "We needed boxes people trust at first touch" — A the upsstore Asia Case

I had always dismissed big brands like Hallmark for business orders. I thought they were for individual consumers buying single birthday cards, not for procurement like me. I also assumed they'd be more expensive. But I was wrong.

I spent a few days doing my due diligence. I compared pricing for 500 business cards (my standard order) across 4 online vendors:

  • Local print shop (Mike): $55 for 500, but invoicing was a hassle.
  • Online Printer A: $34 for 500, but reviews mentioned inconsistent cutting.
  • Online Printer B: $48 for 500, good reviews but long shipping times.
  • Hallmark business ordering: $42 for 500, with the Hallmark logo, design templates included, and free shipping over $50.

The numbers said go with the cheapest option (Printer A). My gut said stick with Hallmark—the brand felt safer. I went with my gut. And it worked out.

The Reality: What Hallmark Actually Got Right

So far, I've placed two orders with Hallmark's business service—one for 150 greeting cards and one for 300 flyers. Here's what surprised me:

1. The ordering process was stupidly easy.

I logged in, selected a design from their library (which is vast), customized it with our company logo and message, and submitted. No back-and-forth emails about fonts, no arguing about bleed lines. It took 15 minutes. Compare that to the 2-3 hours I'd typically spend on a local print order.

2. The quality was consistent.

The cards came out exactly as the preview showed. Not "close enough." Exactly. And for the flyers, the color was consistent from the first batch to the second. I didn't have to do a quality check on every unit. That peace of mind is worth something.

3. The hidden costs were gone.

Mike would hit me with random fees: a $25 "setup fee" for using one of his templates, a $15 "color correction fee" because he didn't like the way my file looked. Hallmark's pricing was transparent. The price on the screen was the price on my invoice. That alone saves me 2-3 hours of reconciliation time per month.

I calculated that my total cost of ordering from Hallmark—including my time spent on the order—is about 35% lower than it was with my local shop. Even though the unit price is similar, the process inefficiencies were eating up my budget.

In Q3 2024, we tested 4 vendors and found pricing variations of 40% for identical specifications. But the biggest gap wasn't in the sticker price—it was in the hidden costs of time and rework. Hallmark's transparency wasn't a luxury; it was a cost-saver.

See also How to Use Avery.com Templates for Google Docs: A Step-by-Step Guide (Including the Avery 8371 Template)

The Lesson: What I Wish I'd Known

I'm not here to say Hallmark is perfect. I've only been at this for 6 months. But the contrast has been eye-opening. I used to think that using a big brand meant paying more for a name. What I've learned is that the name often comes with infrastructure: a better online portal, a reliable supply chain, and a team that handles things so you don't have to.

Also, I realized something about my own philosophy. I had been treating small vendors like Mike as if they were fragile, and I was afraid to hold them accountable because I liked them as people. That's not a good procurement strategy. A vendor that can't provide proper invoicing, can't hit deadlines, and can't manage quality control isn't a vendor I should be using, no matter how nice they are.

Hallmark's business service isn't for everyone. If you're ordering 1,000 custom packaging boxes, you probably need a specialist. But for standard stuff—greeting cards, flyers, posters, invite cards, gift boxes? I'm sold. Hallmark's design library and customizability handle 90% of our needs, and the bulk order process is straightforward. The brand trust is a bonus.

My advice to other office admins: don't confuse loyalty with good service. A vendor that makes your job easier is worth more than a vendor that makes you feel like a friend. And if you're sitting on a pile of bad invoices and late deliveries, it might be time to take the big-brand plunge.

(Prices as of Jan 2025; verify current rates with Hallmark business services.)

This entry was posted in blog.
Bookmark the permalink.
author-avatar
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.

Why I Pay Premium for Rush Printing Orders (and You Should Too)
how-a-perfume-packaging-specialist-solved-its-sustainability-puzzle-with-digital-cardboard-378
Recent Posts
  • 24 Jun Why I Pay Premium for Rush Printing Orders (and You Should Too)
  • 24 Jun Why I Switched from Local Print Shops to Hallmark for Our Company Cards (And Didn't Look Back)
  • 24 Jun How a Perfume Packaging Specialist Solved Its Sustainability Puzzle with Digital Cardboard Box Production
  • 24 Jun From Pet Food Headaches to Customizable Food Bag Solutions: A Midwest Converter’s Story
  • 24 Jun The Real Cost of Plastic Bottles: Why the Cheapest Spray Bottle Supplier Isn't Your Best Bet
  • 24 Jun Rush Flyer Printing with Brother Printers: A Step-by-Step Checklist for Last-Minute Party Prep
  • 24 Jun Loctite 638, 271 Threadlocker, or Super Glue Ultra Gel? Real-World Lessons from a Guy Who Learned the Hard Way
  • 24 Jun Choosing the Right Loctite Adhesive: From 641 and Spray Adhesives to Retaining Compound Charts
  • 23 Jun When a Prayer Poster Almost Broke Our Specs: A Greif Quality Tale
  • 23 Jun Why Greif Packaging Solutions Outperform Generic Options: A Quality Inspector's Perspective
Andreaali
Laali
Thietkewebsoctrang
Forumevren
Kitchensinkfaucetsland
Drywallscottsdale
Remodelstyle
Blackicecn
Mllpaattinen
Qiangzhi
Codepenters
Glitterstyles
Bignewsweb
Snapinsta
Pickuki
Hemppublishingcomany
Wpfreshstart5
Enlignepharm
Faizsaaid
Lalpaths
Hariankampar
Chdianbao
Windesigners
Mebour
Sjya
Cqchangyuan
Caiyujs
Vezultechnology
Dgxdmjx
Newvesti
Gzgkjx
Kssignal
Hkshingyip
Cqhongkuai
Bjyqsdz
Dizajn
Thebandmusic
Ardaghgroupus
Fedexofficesupply
Bankersboxus
Georgiapacificus
Averysupply
Ecoenclosetech
Dixiefactory
Duckustech
Amcorus
Bemisus
Gotprintus
Loctiteus
Berryglobalus
E6000us
Lightningsourceus
3mindustry
Greinersupply
Dartcontainerus
Hallmarkcardssupply
48hourprintus
Berlinpackagingus
Bubblewrapus
Fillmorecontain
Imperialdadeus
Americangreetin
Ballcorporationsupply
Brotherfactory
Frenchpaperus
Usgorilla
Bystroniclaserus
Hyperthermus
Soltamedicalus
Amadasupply
Glowforgepro
Scitonus
Uponorus
Nexaflowusa
Abiindustry
Hyundaisupply
Sbacommunicatio
Lvdsupply
Froniusus
Sunnovaus
Bostonscientifius
Getingesupply
Viewrailus
Mitsubishielectricfan
Sdlgus
Kichlerus
Bohnusa
Gardnerdenverus
Netzschus
Andritzus
Huntsmansupply
Standardtextileusa
Smithandnephewus
Aramithus
Hartingus
Johnsoncontrolsus
Cambriasupply
Knaufinsulationus
Semtechus
Bystronicus
Solaredgeus
Getbyd
Basfsupply
Convatecus
Scigamesus
Apcupsus
Kobelcosupply
Artemideusa
Mazakdirect
Nordbergus
Pylontechus
Kimberlyclarkus
Globusmedicalus
Smithsmedicalus
Creeus
Flukeus
Mccloskeyusa
Bauerfactory
Hunterdouglasus
Teijinusa
Rochediagnosticus
Simonisus

Terms and conditions · OrderYoyo © 2018

Powered by Powered By OrderYoyo