As you hopefully understand now, Bridgeport National Bindery, Documation, and Linemark are new 'breeds' of printing companies delivering books of one with fantastic technology, different deliverables, and located in very different parts of the US.
All companies are located in areas where recruiting employees is difficult. Bridgeport National Bindery said that their growth was limited because it's almost impossible to recruit new people. Therefore, the need for automation is a question about being faster and smarter and a question of investing in technology that can support the companies growth in times where it's difficult or impossible to attract new labor.
The need for further automation is clear - the companies able to produce books of one see a growing demand, and the channels are vast. Some are directly integrated to various publishers' backends, some to Amazon, some to HP's Siteflow, and some even serve the growing Cloudprinter platform. The role of salespeople changes since the nature of the supply chain changes along with the new technology available.
To see companies able to print books of one is exciting, but even more interesting is seeing how prices on digitally produced books get closer and closer to those in offset. I didn't ask where the break-even was for books in either technology. Still, the entire business model is changing with no warehousing, books printed only after order (and typically payment), no book shops, and no speculations about minimum orders. For those who have invested in technology supporting these trends - well, they seem to be on the winning side!
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