
The Print Lord’s Guide to Print That Actually Gets Read
You can spend hundreds of pounds on beautifully designed, expertly printed materials. Premium stock, flawless finishing, perfect colour matching. But if nobody reads it, you have wasted every penny.
Print that sits in a pile, gets binned unread, or fails to hold attention is not just ineffective, it is expensive failure. The goal is not just to create print. The goal is to create print that gets read, remembered, and acted upon.
Print Lord has spent decades helping businesses create materials that actually work. Today, we are sharing the strategies that separate print people engage with from print people ignore.
Start with a Reason to Care
Before someone reads your print, they make a split-second decision: is this worth my time?
That decision is not rational. It is instinctive. It happens in less than three seconds, and it is based entirely on whether your print immediately communicates something relevant, valuable, or interesting.
If your headline says “Welcome to Our Company” or “About Our Services,” you have already lost. Those are not reasons to care. They are space fillers.
Your headline must answer the reader’s silent question: what is in this for me?
Weak headline: “Introducing Our New Range”
Strong headline: “Cut Your Print Costs by 30% Without Compromising Quality”
The first is about you. The second is about them. People read things that are about them.
Make It Scannable, Not Dense
Most people do not read print word for word. They scan. They look for headlines, subheadings, bullet points, and bold text. They want to know if it is worth their time before they commit to reading every word.
If your print is a wall of text with no visual breaks, no hierarchy, and no breathing room, it looks exhausting. And exhausting things get ignored.
How to make your print scannable:
- – Use clear, descriptive subheadings that tell the story on their own
- Break up long paragraphs into shorter, digestible chunks
- Highlight key points with bold text or pull quotes
- Use bullet points to list benefits, features, or steps
- Leave white space around important elements so they stand out
Scannable print respects the reader’s time. It says: you can get the gist quickly, and if you want more detail, it is here.
Dense print says: sit down, concentrate, and work hard to understand me. People will not do that.
Tell a Story, Not a Sales Pitch
People engage with stories. They disengage from sales pitches.
A story has a problem, a journey, and a resolution. It has characters, emotion, and relatability. A sales pitch has features, benefits, and a call to action.
Which do you think people would rather read?
Sales pitch approach:
“We offer comprehensive print solutions with fast turnaround times, competitive pricing, and excellent customer service. Contact us today to discuss your requirements.”
Story approach:
“Last month, a Brighton restaurant group came to us three days before their relaunch. Their previous printer had let them down, and they had no menus, no signage, and no time. We stepped in, checked every detail, and delivered everything on brand and on time. They opened to a packed house, and their materials looked flawless.”
The story makes you curious. It shows Print Lord solving a real problem. It makes the reader think: if they can do that for a restaurant, they can help me too.
Sales pitches tell. Stories show. And showing always wins.
Focus on Benefits, Not Features
Features describe what something is. Benefits describe what it does for the reader.
People do not care about features unless they understand the benefit. And most print focuses entirely on features.
Feature-focused: “Our 400gsm business cards are printed on premium stock with a matt laminate finish.”
Benefit-focused: “Your business card will feel substantial, professional, and impossible to throw away, making a lasting impression every time you hand it out.”
The first statement is factually accurate. The second statement makes you want the product because you understand what it will do for you.
Every time you mention a feature, follow it immediately with the benefit. Stock weight matters because it feels premium. Fast turnaround matters because you meet your deadline. Expert advice matters because you avoid costly mistakes.
Features are the what. Benefits are the why. Always lead with why.
Use Visuals That Support, Not Distract
Images, photos, and graphics should enhance your message, not compete with it. Too often, print is cluttered with decorative visuals that add nothing and distract from the core message.
Good visuals:
- – Show your product or service in use
- Illustrate a benefit or outcome
- Create emotional connection or relatability
- Guide the eye towards key information
Bad visuals:
- – Generic stock photos with no relevance to your message
- Decorative elements that clutter the layout
- Images that compete with your headline for attention
- Visuals that confuse rather than clarify
If you cannot explain why an image is there and what job it is doing, remove it. Every element on your print should earn its place.
Make the Next Step Obvious and Easy
You have done the hard work. Your headline grabbed attention. Your copy was clear and engaging. Your reader is interested. Now what?
If they have to work to figure out what to do next, they will not do it. Your call to action must be obvious, simple, and frictionless.
Weak call to action: “For more information, please visit our website or call our office during business hours to speak with a member of our team.”
Strong call to action: “Call 01273 123456 or visit printlord.co.uk. We will sort it.”
One action is better than three. A phone number is better than a paragraph. Simple language is better than formal waffle.
And if you can, give them a reason to act now rather than later. Limited availability, a deadline, or a time-sensitive offer all create urgency.
Quality Signals Matter More Than You Think
Before anyone reads a single word, they have already judged your print based on how it feels, how it looks, and how it is presented.
Cheap stock, poor finishing, and low-quality printing send a message: this business cuts corners. That impression sticks, even if your copy is brilliant.
Premium stock, clean finishing, and professional print quality send a different message: this business takes pride in what they do. That builds trust before the first word is read.
Print Lord never underestimates the power of quality signals. The weight of the paper, the sharpness of the print, the precision of the trim, they all contribute to whether your print gets read or ignored.
People engage with print that feels worth engaging with. Make sure yours does.
Test Your Print with the Three-Second Rule
Here is the simplest, most brutal test for whether your print will get read:
Show it to someone for three seconds, then take it away. Ask them what they remember.
If they can tell you the main message and what action you want them to take, your print works. If they remember a jumble of information with no clear focus, it does not.
This is how your audience experiences your print in the real world. A glance. A scan. A split-second decision about whether it is worth their time.
If your print fails the three-second test, it will fail in the real world too.
Print That Gets Read is Print That Respects the Reader
Ultimately, the difference between print that works and print that gets ignored comes down to respect.
Respect for the reader’s time. Respect for their intelligence. Respect for their need to understand quickly why this matters to them.
Print that tries to say everything ends up saying nothing. Print that focuses on features without benefits leaves people cold. Print that is hard to scan, cluttered with irrelevant visuals, or unclear about the next step wastes the reader’s time and your money.
Print that gets read is clear, focused, benefit-driven, and easy to act on. It looks professional, feels substantial, and communicates one strong message.
That is what Print Lord helps businesses create. Not just print. Print that works.
Ready to Create Print That Actually Gets Read?
If your current print materials are not delivering results, or if you want to make sure your next project hits the mark, Print Lord is here to help.
We do not just print what you send. We advise, improve, and make sure your materials work as hard as you do. Expert guidance, honest feedback, and print that is on brand and on time, every time.
Print Lord. At your service. On brand. On time.
printlord.co.uk