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Newsletter Vol. 1

Issue 1/ Dec. 2007

  

866-663-4812
www.fastembtapes.com

 Archiving Embroidery Files


By PAUL MALHAM
FET Owner

orror stories abounded in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Lives were lost and homes swept away in the floodwaters that ravaged New Orleans.

People's livelihoods were also destroyed. In the promotional products business, we've heard the sad tales of distributors and embroiderers whose digitized files were lost forever, under 10 feet of water. With no backup files, years of hard work literally went down the drain.
 
Katrina was the latest big reminder that in our business, the weakest link is a failure to professionally archive embroidery files.
 
The problem was – and still is -- that not many distributors can afford the expensive software needed to open up .dst-extension embroidery files and to store those files. And the potential risk of a distributor not being able to view and control his files is enormous.
 
Minus that access, a distributor could mistakenly send out an embroidery file – with the color off, or a wrong tagline, a missing trademark, or a year off on the date – and not find out until the damage has been done.
 
It's our business to save you the pain of losing $10,000 from a single mistake. Why shoot yourself in the foot financially – and possibly lose a customer when you could have your files securely stored and available on the FET website, at the click of a mouse?
 
As some of our clients know, we at Fast Tapes began as distributors. As we got into digitizing, we saw that digitizing was only the first step. We tracked the evolving technology of archiving and eventually tied together several processes to put total control into the hands of the little guy, in the form of web-based archiving of digitized files. This one feature would have saved us several miscued orders and thousands of dollars.
 
With this cost-effective system, distributors can quickly and efficiently control and deliver files to their customers. And here at Fast Tapes, when we digitize a file, our process automatically archives it.
 
Working inside a failsafe environment to handle and protect all his embroidery files, the little guy can weather downturns, survive a fire or flood, sidestep ruinous supply relationships - and approach every business opportunity knowing his embroidery files are locked inside an electronic vault. Those files are offsite and easily accessible over the Internet. Only the files owner has the keys to the vault.

Fast Embroidery Tapes Archiving Center

With this access and control, the distributor is not at anyone else's mercy, waiting for new orders or simple changes to be made. Also, he can job out the same logo to several embroidery shops, secure that a client's company logo will look exactly the same coming out of each shop.
 
At Fast Tapes, we're essentially the caretakers and oversight team helping the distributor stay in control of a total archiving system.
 
With our system, a distributor can email files with a client's logo on them, to any embroidery shop or supplier he chooses. And he can send a file back to FET for changes, big or small.
 
Embroiderers also have a lot to lose if their files are lost or compromised. In our next issue I'll discuss how archiving can best serve and safeguard your embroidery business, and greatly increase its value should you decide to sell.

The Rise of the Machines

By
DENYS BUCKSTEN
FET Editor

"Increasingly, people are looking for a fast turnaround because, with single head machines, they can get it."
~Mike McEvoy
Tajima

s cheaply made, offshore clothing imports continue to batter U.S. shores with tsunami-like ferocity, more distributors here are using single-head embroidery machines to weather turbulent domestic competition in the promotional products industry.

Whether buying or leasing, a single-head machine is giving some distributors the greatest competitive edge in supplying embroidered apparel -- since fax machines hit the workplace 30 years ago. Distributors, using single head machines, can now deliver quality samples within days while competitors are playing phone tag with the order department at large embroidery firms.

By leasing a single head machine, like a Tajima, from Hirsch International, a Melco Amaya, an SWF or another brand, for about $300 a month -- or buying one outright for between 15,000 and $20,000 –- the power of the machines has been placed into the hands of the distributor who needs 15 navy polo shirts, with ACME Tools, top left in gold lettering, for its Labor Day picnic.

Mike McEvoy, vice-president of marketing for Tajima-Hirsch, says production of single-head machines, retailing at about $15,000 with the peripherals, has taken a big upward swing at his company in response, not only to the ever-expanding corporate casual trend, but also to that 800-pound gorilla of cheap overseas outsourcing.

 "One of the big things we've seen with the really large embroidery orders going overseas, is that the demand, domestically, for people to do more short run work has increased. With that is the increased popularity of promotional products dealers with web sites and shopping cars, versus door-to-door sales.

 "Single head machines are easier than ever to learn and use; they can be installed in a back room at an office or in the distributor's home. Increasingly, people are looking for a fast turnaround because they can get it"


Tajima TFMX-C1501/450x520
Paul Malham, president of Fast Embroidery Tapes, says single-head embroidery machines give a newfound control to the distributor -- that they've never had or even envisioned. "Offshore production has taken bigger orders away in the U.S., so there's more competition for smaller orders 

"Thus, it's becoming more and more important to create some sense of control in running your business when it comes to small orders, because small orders lead to big orders," he says.

Malham's Fast Embroidery Tapes is an industry leader in the technology of digitizing embroidery files, archiving these files and giving distributors one-click access, 24/7, to their own files. FET's capabilities perfectly complement the new business model of having a single-head embroidery machine in-house.

"Having a single head machine will absolutely pay for itself in increased sales by the increased use of spec samples," says Malham. "With one new order a month, for $1,000, you would cover the cost of the machine".

And, Malham warns, misfiring on a small order, especially a first order, can be disastrous. "You have to be very careful with that first order because the customer is testing you. You have to establish yourself as a reliable source. The buyer's job depends on reliably sourcing the needs for his company, so you need to make that person look good in the eyes of his boss. As orders get smaller you have to perform extremely well in order to get bigger orders, which you can do with a single-head machine."

"Distributors have to be out there selling," says Malham. "They don't have a week to go to Phoenix and learn a complicated machine. But with today's, user-friendly single-head machines, they get great in-house control by doing their own short-run jobs. In turn they can impress first-time customers and create more business.

Adds Malham, "Spending money on a single head machine, like a Tajima, is an insurance policy to your success by giving you the capabilities your competitors don't have. You can be up and running within hours. Learning to run one of these machines is a little like learning how to use a color copier".

Jay Hall, owner of Promos and Logos, Inc., near Atlanta , says that "Up until August of last year this company had always farmed out their embroidery and would wait for three or four weeks to get it back. And so did we, when we bought the company in 2001.

"But after an incident with a vendor, when the order didn't come through on time, we felt we had to find another embroider or do the job ourselves," says Hall, whose company now has three single-head machines.  

"Now, if I need 165 button-down polos, we can turn them around in four days by running our three machines around the clock," Hall says. "One of the main reasons in doing it ourselves is our being particular and having quality control going out the door. We want the best product in a timely manner, coupled with the best service."

Part I in a series.

 


Ask Betty Hoop

 


Dear Betty,
I have a logo that was originally punched for a left chest.  Now my customer is ready to order some hats.  Can I use the same embroidery file for the hats?

 ~Just Wondering

Dear Wondering,
Logos punched for caps generally start in the center and work towards the sides.  This reduces the movement caused by sewing on a curved surface.  A tape can typically be edited to work.  The other issue to consider is the maximum sewable height of your cap.  Some low profile caps only allow for 2" of height.  Higher caps usually can handle 2.5".  If you are embroidering the caps before assembly, you may be able to reach nearly 3" of height.  Check with your embroiderer to determine the best height for your application.

~Betty Hoop


Submit Your
Questions to Betty



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