Large companies with multiple locations, branches or sales regions face a common challenge: How do employees order printed materials correctly, in a CI-compliant and cost-efficient manner - without the marketing department having to intervene with every order? The answer is: a closed shop, also called a corporate print portal. In this article you will find out what a closed shop does, what use cases it is suitable for and what implementation and operation realistically cost.
A closed shop is a password-protected online shop that is only accessible to defined user groups - usually employees of a company, franchise partners, dealers or other authorized purchasers. Unlike a public online shop, the closed shop cannot be found via search engines and requires explicit activation by the user.
Anyone can order in a public print shop. Prices are visible, products are generally offered. A closed shop, on the other hand, shows each user exactly the products, templates and prices that are relevant and approved for them. A regional manager sees e.g. E.g. products other than a branch manager - and certain fields such as company name or logo can be pre-filled or blocked to ensure that the corporate identity is preserved.
For corporations, a corporate print portal is more than an ordering system. It is a central tool for brand control, purchasing management and internal cost control. Budgets can be allocated per cost center, approval workflows can be mapped and reporting dashboards can be provided for purchasing.
The introduction of a closed shop brings measurable benefits for both departments - which often have conflicting interests. Purchasing wants to reduce costs and standardize processes. Marketing wants to ensure brand consistency and maintain creative control. A well-configured corporate print portal solves this conflict of objectives.
Closed shops for companies can be found in almost all industries where decentralized structures and brand relevance come together. The most common scenarios:
Retail chains, catering franchises or bank branches order locally adapted advertising material such as flyers, posters, displays or menus via the closed shop. The franchisee selects the products, fills in local fields and orders - the rest of the layout cannot be changed and is therefore CI-safe.
Instead of physically storing brochures and giveaways, corporations are increasingly relying on print-on-demand via closed shops. Employees order as needed, the print shop produces and delivers directly. This saves storage costs and prevents outdated inventory.
Field service employees can use mobile devices to order personalized business cards, offer folders or presentation documents and have them delivered directly to customer addresses. This speeds up the sales process significantly.
Authorities and universities with multiple departments use closed shops to enforce uniform corporate design guidelines and simplify procurement processes.
PrintDesk offers fully configurable corporate print portals – including user rights, budgets and approval workflows.
Request a demo nowThe most common question when planning a project is: How long does it take to set up and how much does it cost? The answer depends on the complexity of the project – number of user groups, number of products and templates, depth of ERP integration.
| phase | Contents | Duration (typical) |
|---|---|---|
| Requirements analysis | User groups, products, workflows, integration | 1-2 weeks |
| Configuration & Setup | Portal setup, user roles, template import | 2-4 weeks |
| Template customization | Create and share CI templates | 1-3 weeks |
| Testing & pilot operation | Internal tests, pilot group | 1-2 weeks |
| Rollout | Activation for all users, training | 1 week |
A typical project for a medium-sized company with 3-5 user groups and 20-50 products is productive in 6-10 weeks. Complex corporate projects with ERP connection and multiple clients can take 3-6 months.
Compared to the processing times saved on the customer side, these investments usually pay for themselves within 6-18 months. Print shops that offer a closed shop retain major customers for a longer period of time and significantly increase their average annual sales per customer.
PrintDesk is one Web-to-print software, which was developed specifically for print shops and includes closed shop functionality as a native component. The platform is via the PrintDesk closed shop solution available and is aimed at printing companies that want to offer their major customers professional self-service portals.
As a printing company, you don't have to employ your own developer to offer your customers a professional closed shop. PrintDesk takes over the technical infrastructure. You configure products, prices and templates - and give the customer a finished portal link with their own login. Learn how to do one in the related article Brand portal for printing companies which ensures corporate identity in print production.
For printing companies that want to expand their customer base with self-service portals, PrintDesk is the fastest way to a productive closed shop - without in-house development and without long implementation phases.
Get in touch and find out how PrintDesk makes your first corporate print portal productive in less than 4 weeks.