
The 3 Biggest Mistakes Small Businesses Make with Print (And How to Avoid Them)
Every week, Print Lord sees the same costly mistakes happening across small businesses. Smart people, good intentions, but print materials that miss the mark, waste money, and dilute impact.
The frustrating part? These mistakes are entirely avoidable. Once you know what to look for, you can sidestep the pitfalls and create print that actually works for your business.
Let’s walk through the three biggest mistakes Print Lord sees repeatedly, and more importantly, how to avoid them.
Mistake 1: Cramming Too Much Information onto One Piece
This is the most common mistake Print Lord encounters. Business owners try to fit everything about their company, every service they offer, and every possible benefit onto a single flyer or postcard.
The thinking goes: “I’ve paid for this print, so I need to make it count. I’ll include everything.”
The result? A cluttered, overwhelming mess that nobody reads. Your audience glances at it, feels confused, and bins it within seconds.
Why This Happens
Small business owners often fear missing an opportunity. What if someone needs that particular service? What if they don’t realise we offer that product?
This fear leads to cramming. Every square centimetre gets filled with text, bullet points, logos, and contact details in increasingly smaller fonts.
The Fix
Print Lord’s rule: One piece, one message.
Decide what you want this particular print piece to achieve. Are you promoting a specific service? Announcing an event? Building brand awareness? Driving people to your website?
Pick one goal. Build everything around that single message.
If you offer ten services, create ten different pieces over time. Each one can focus, breathe, and actually get noticed.
What Good Looks Like
Effective print uses hierarchy and white space. Your main message dominates. Supporting details stay minimal and scannable. Contact information is clear but not competing with your headline.
Think of your print piece as a signpost, not a textbook. Point people in one clear direction.
Mistake 2: No Clear Call to Action
Print Lord regularly receives artwork that looks polished and professional but answers this critical question poorly: “What should the reader do next?”
Many business owners create beautiful print materials that inform, educate, or showcase, but then stop. They forget to tell people what action to take.
Why This Happens
Sometimes it feels pushy to ask for something. Other times, business owners assume the next step is obvious.
But your audience is busy, distracted, and holding a piece of print for approximately three seconds before deciding whether to engage or discard. If you don’t guide them clearly, they’ll do nothing.
The Fix
Every piece of print needs a clear, specific call to action (CTA). Not a subtle hint. Not an implied suggestion. An actual instruction.
Good CTAs are:
– Specific: “Visit printlord.co.uk/labels” beats “Check out our website”
– Action-oriented: “Call now for a quote” beats “We’re here to help”
– Easy to follow: “Scan this QR code” beats a long URL typed in tiny text
What Good Looks Like
Your CTA should be visually prominent. It might be in a different colour, a larger font, or positioned in a high-visibility spot.
And limit yourself to one primary CTA per piece. Two at most. More than that, and you’re back to confusing your audience about what matters most.
If you want people to call, make the phone number unmissable. If you want them to visit a specific page, give them the shortest possible route there.
Mistake 3: Trying to Please Everyone (And Pleasing No One)
This mistake shows up in both the message and the design. Business owners try to speak to every possible customer type, every demographic, every use case.
The result? Print that feels generic, bland, and forgettable. It offends no one because it connects with no one.
Why This Happens
The fear of excluding anyone is powerful. What if you focus on restaurants and a retail shop needs your service? What if you emphasise local customers and someone from out of town wants to order?
This leads to watered-down messaging that tries to cover all bases. Vague headlines. Safe imagery. Language so broad it could apply to any business in any industry.
The Fix
Accept that you cannot be everything to everyone. Trying to appeal to the widest possible audience actually shrinks your impact.
Instead, get specific. Speak directly to your ideal customer. Use language they recognise. Reference challenges they face. Show examples relevant to their world.
Yes, this means some people won’t feel like your print is “for them.” That’s not just acceptable, it’s strategic. The people who do feel spoken to will respond far more strongly.
What Good Looks Like
Imagine you run a print company serving hospitality businesses. Compare these two headlines:
Generic: “High-Quality Print for Your Business”
Specific: “Menu Print That Survives Busy Service and Still Looks Sharp”
The second headline immediately speaks to restaurant owners. They recognise their world. They feel understood. They’re far more likely to engage.
Print Lord often creates different versions of the same core message for different audience segments. One postcard for event organisers. Another for retail shops. Same company, same services, but tailored messaging that lands.
The Common Thread: Clarity Wins
All three mistakes share a root cause: lack of clarity.
When you try to say everything, you say nothing. When you don’t guide people clearly, they drift away. When you speak to everyone, you connect with no one.
Print Lord’s approach is simple: be clear, be focused, and respect your audience’s limited attention.
Your print materials are competing with everything else demanding attention in someone’s day. They’ll only engage if you make it easy, relevant, and obvious why they should care.
How to Avoid These Mistakes Before You Print
Before sending any artwork to print, Print Lord recommends asking yourself:
- 1. **What’s the one thing I want this piece to communicate?** If you can’t answer in a single sentence, you need to simplify.
- 2. **What specific action should the reader take?** Write it down. Then make sure it’s unmissable on your design.
- 3. **Who exactly is this for?** Get specific. Then check whether your language, imagery, and message will resonate with that specific person.
If you can answer all three confidently, you’re already ahead of most small business print.
When to Call in Professional Help
Print Lord is always happy to talk through your project before you commit. Sometimes a quick conversation saves you from an expensive mistake.
We’ll tell you honestly if your design is trying to do too much. We’ll suggest a stronger call to action if yours is unclear. And we’ll help you sharpen your message so it actually lands with the right people.
This isn’t about upselling you on premium finishes or extra copies. It’s about making sure your print works. Because when your print fails, Print Lord hasn’t done the job properly.
The Reality: Most Print Fails Because of Strategy, Not Quality
Print Lord can deliver flawless colour matching, sharp finishing, and beautiful stock. But if the strategy behind your print is flawed, even perfect execution won’t save it.
These three mistakes are strategic problems, not technical ones. Fix the strategy, and your print becomes a genuine business asset. Ignore it, and you’re just spending money to create clutter.
Print Smarter, Not Harder
Avoiding these mistakes doesn’t require a design degree or a marketing qualification. It requires honesty, clarity, and focus.
One message per piece. One clear action. One specific audience.
Get those three things right, and your print will outperform competitors spending twice as much on glossier, busier, vaguer materials.
Print Lord is here to help you get it right, from brief through to delivery. If you’d like a second pair of eyes on your next project before it goes to print, get in touch. We’ll make sure you’re spending your money on print that actually works.
Print Lord. At your service. On brand. On time.
printlord.co.uk