| Greetings |
This month, we’re taking a look at our premier product for off-line proofing, the Guardian Off-Line Proofing System. The Guardian OLP was designed to help prevent costly printing errors, and has many features that will help your workflow run more efficiently. Check out our Monthly Focus section for more information.
PC Industries also would like to introduce our three newest members of the team, Alek Jablonski, Timothy Quinn, and Holly Poplawski.
Alek Jablonski- National Sales Manager
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Alek comes to PC Industries with more than 15 years experience in sales and business development covering a wide variety of technology focused companies. |
Timothy Quinn- Technical Sales
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With 20 years of experience specializing in mechanical design, Tim brings his skills to both engineering and sales support. |
Holly Poplawski- Marketing/ Graphic Designer
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Holly brings 4 years of professional design and marketing experience to PC Industries, as well as an extensive web design background. |
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| Monthly Focus: Guardian OLP |
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The PC Industries’ Guardian OLP identifies differences between customer-approved PDF files, artwork revisions and scanned printed samples. The Guardian OLP verifies content accuracy throughout the design and production workflow to eliminate defects- preventing costly rework and minimizing liability.
Learn More… |
From now until July 31st, receive a free upgrade to a 28" monitor with the Guardian OLP.
To take advantage of this, contact:
Jack Woolley
Phone: 1-800-997-1960 or
(847) 336-3300 ext. 50
jackw@pcindustries.com |
| Featured Monthly Promotion: LinkedIN |
Connect with us on LinkedIN and we’ll send you a free gift!
Call us (847-336-3300) or email Jack Woolley (jackw@pcindstries.com) for more information.
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| July’s InfoByte |
InfoBytes are interesting bits of information from around the globe. This month’s byte is about the origin of the phrase "Mind your P’s and Q’s."
This phrase originated in shops working with movable type presses. The letters on the blocks used in these presses were reversed, such that they would read correctly when printed on paper. Because of this, several letters were often mixed up by printers’ apprentices, including p’s, q’s, b’s, and d’s. "Mind your P’s and Q’s" was a warning from the master to the apprentice to be sure that the tricky letters were properly sorted.
But, as is often the case with sayings like this, this isn’t the only proposed origin of the phrase. For other explanations, see World Wide Words |
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