Page 18 - Print 21 Magazine March-April 2019
P. 18

Web Printing
Printing in the web league
No other sector of the industry has higher barriers to entry or is as capital intensive as web printing. As magazine and newspaper volumes diminish the prospects of a new player entering the lucrative sector are remote. Which puts John Georgantzakos in a unique position. His company may not be the size of the other players, but he is fiercely competitive and protective of family-owned Spot Press. He spoke with Patrick Howard.
that have other businesses, so there’s leverage there. It’s similar to a regional newspaper, but instead of being geographically based, it’s ethnic-based. The combined reach and the readership of multicultural print media are in the hundreds of thousands every week. Most people don’t realise the great influence these publications have, especially amongst older people where it’s often their primary contact. I
once calculated that the combined readership of ethnic print media represents a quarter of Australia’s voting population,” he said.
Diversify for growth
John and Dimitri Georgantzakos are determined to meet the challenges thrown up by the changing media landscape. Spotpress is just emerging from a period of in-depth upgrades of its systems to improve productivity. The aim is to expand the range of offerings to its customer base, while maintaining the strong print relationship at its core.
“Because Spotpress is growing we’ve been focused on creating efficiencies in our business through software rollouts, implementation of MIS, CRM systems, and workflows. We’ve put software systems into all areas of our business. It takes a while to get them to integrate with each other; sometimes that’s easier said than done”, said Georgantzakos
Georgantzakos knows Spotpress has to expand, but only in ways that makes sense. A swag of regional newspapers inherited from failing
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Printing is traditionally an industry dominated by family-owned, owner- operated businesses.
The majority of printing companies have less than ten
employees with the boss often taking a hands-on role. There are larger operations; $10 million to $20 million companies, and larger again, but even there most have grown from the family business. So it is not unusual that the brothers Georgantzakos, John and Dimitri, run their family-owned Spotpress. Their father George started the business in 1981, and in the best tradition of the industry, his two sons joined early, and are carrying on where he left off. What makes Spotpress so special is that it’s a
web printing company, operating two Heidelberg heatset presses and two Goss newspaper presses at its Sydney plant, producing newspapers and magazines in the same rarefied business sector as News Corp, Nine, Ovato and IVE Group.
For John Georgantzakos the size of the other players is of little concern. He has a high level of respect and admiration for the large players. He also has cordial relationships with them all, with very little obvious competition.
“We strategically stay out of their way, targeting a different types of client. Their focus is on the corporate sector. Our focus on tier two and three publishers and retailers,” he said. “We don’t set out to compete with them. They’re servicing a different sector to us.”
Spotpress is one of two smaller independent, privately owned, web printers left, following the recent bout of consolidation. (The former Cadillac, now Graphic Web in Adelaide,
owned by Sydney-based Access Print Solutions is the other.)
Spotpress is the sole family-owned business in the sector. As joint managing director of 30 years
18 Print21 MARCH/APRIL 2019
experience, John Georgantzakos is deeply informed and knowledgeable about the web market. He is engaged with the industry on multiple levels, notably as a director on the board
of Printing Industries, but mainly as an owner-operator in the rapidly changing sector.
Spotpress operates in a unique specialised market where it is
the dominant player. The ethnic newspaper industry is surprisingly large, and Georgantzakos is well versed in its many opportunities and challenges.
“We service the majority of the ethnic media in Australia. We print nine out of ten of them, maybe even more, nationwide. We literally print hundreds of ethnic publications, newspapers and magazines, in more than thirty languages.
“Over the course of forty years we’ve built up a good team that understands the idiosyncrasies of every culture
we have to deal with. And remember, the way of doing business in every culture is not necessarily the same as in western culture.
One at a time
“We’ve built the business one customer at a time. In most cases
our clients are owner-operators, the publishing business is their livelihood and they’ll fight tooth and nail to protect their livelihood,” he said.
The statistics are fascinating. The average newspaper print run is under 10,000 copies. Average pagination is 32-40 pages. Publishers continuously launch supplements and commercial magazines leveraging off their primary product. In a marked difference to the mainstream newspapers, overall the volumes in the ethnic press are stable.
“There may be a slight decline among individual titles, but that’s offset through the launch of additional titles. There are customers
The soaring price of energy and labour scarcity are reasons why Georgantzakos is keenly engaged with the Printing Industries power campaign


































































































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