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A Beginner's Guide to On-Demand Book Printing in Canada



03.12.2024

Thinking of self-publishing your book?

From autobiographies to photographic memoirs, the trend towards book printing on-demand is reshaping how authors and publishers approach the creation and distribution of books. With a vibrant literary culture and advanced printing technologies, Canadian writers and publishers have first-class access to an ecosystem that empowers self-publishing like never before.

WCD has divested of its print and signage divisions to Cober Solutions, offering expanded national capabilities. Find out more >>

Cober Solutions

This guide delves into the essentials of on-demand book printing in Canada, offering valuable insights for anyone looking to navigate this new approach to publishing.

We’ll get into:

You’ll learn the basics of this evolving industry, and key steps you can take to print your very own book on demand. Let’s get into it!

What is On-Demand Book Printing?

On-demand book printing is a printing process that empowers you to print books in specific quantities as needed, ranging from a single copy to a few hundred thanks to the nimble technology behind digital printing. This model is a departure from traditional bulk printing, offering a flexible and cost-effective solution for authors and publishers.

Why Authors Choose to Self-Publish

A primary motivator for self-publishing may be a desire for creative control over your book's content, design, and marketing. Self-publishing allows authors to retain full rights to their work, making decisions about the cover art, format, pricing, and distribution channels—all according to their vision and goals.

Self-publishing can also lead to higher royalty rates compared to traditional publishing routes, offering authors a potentially better return on investment. Access to self-publishing platforms has lowered the barrier to entry, empowering authors to reach their audience directly without the need for approval from a publisher. For example, many authors now leverage their online audiences to market their books and sell them directly through their own website, using a print-on-demand method to order only as demand requires.

This direct access empowers authors to share their unique voices and stories, catering to niche markets or specialized topics that might not attract mainstream readers. It’s the artists and small businesses that love to story tell—like photographers, business advisors, life coaches, poets, and more—that are greatly benefiting from this new approach to publishing.

Book Printing

The Benefits of On-Demand Printing

Book printing on-demand has many benefits when compared to traditional methods. Let’s take a look at a few.

1) Lower Costs

Traditional printing methods often require large initial print runs, leading to high upfront costs and the need for storage space. On-demand printing eliminates these concerns by allowing authors and publishers to print books only as orders come in, dramatically reducing storage needs and minimizing the financial risk. This is particularly handy for independent authors and small publishers who may have limited budgets.

2) Eco-Friendly Option

By producing books only when there is demand, you can cut down on the overproduction of unsold copies, meaning less paper consumption and waste. This sustainable approach aligns with growing consumer and industry interest in environmentally friendly solutions.

3) Flexibility to Update Content

Because on-demand printing produces books in short runs, authors have the luxury of updating the content of their books between each run with ease. This is particularly handy if your book requires frequent updates to remain relevant, or if that first pass at editing didn’t quite make the cut. It also opens up opportunities for authors to customize books for specific audiences or to test different versions of their work.

If these benefits sound worth the investment, read on for insights on how you can get started with book printing in Canada.

How to Approach Book Printing in Canada

Congratulations! You’ve decided to print your book. While there’s no one way to tackle the production of your piece, here are some general steps to follow before you can hit ‘print’.

1) Research Printers — When you’re looking for a company to print your book, search for printers that specifically offer on-demand printing services and who specialize in book printing in particular. See the section below for some key factors to take into consideration when choosing a service provider.

2) Prepare Your Manuscript — If you’re self-publishing, you’ll need to ensure your manuscript is entirely edited, formatted, designed, and ready for printing. It’s important to remember that your printer will not edit your manuscript for you, so however you deliver it to them is how it will turn out in production. Some printers will have an in-house creative services team that can help you with format and design.

Book Binding

3) Choose Your Book's Specifications — Decide on your book's size, the paper type, and binding. This includes decisions like whether your book will be hardcover or paperback and what style and aesthetic you want it to have. This is where budgets can drastically vary, so it’s good to come prepared with an understanding of your price range.

4) Request Quotes — Contact several providers to compare quotes. Prices can vary based on the book's specifications and the quantity ordered. Keep in mind that you get what you pay for when it comes to book printing, and sometimes investing a bit more to guarantee a quality product can save you headaches down the road.

5) Consider Distribution — Some on-demand printers offer distribution services, including direct shipping to customers and listings on major retail sites. If you choose to ship your product yourself, you may want to select a printer that’s within Canada to avoid hefty cross-border shipping fees.

    Key Considerations for Choosing a Canadian Book Printing Company

    Here’s what we suggest you look for when selecting a Canadian book printing company.

    1) Quality

    The quality of your book reflects on you as an author or publisher, so prioritizing printers that use high-quality materials is important. Look for companies that are transparent and request samples of their work to get a tangible sense of the final product's quality.

    2) Turnaround Time

    While the appeal of on-demand printing includes not having to stockpile books, it's important to remember that on-demand means production times can vary. Ask about expected turnaround times to make sure they align with your publishing timeline, especially if you have specific launch dates in mind or are coordinating marketing efforts.

    Custom Book Printing

    3) Customer Service

    If you're navigating the process for the first time, you’ll want a print partner that’s on your side! A responsive and helpful printing company can offer guidance, address your concerns, and provide updates throughout the printing process. Look for companies with positive reviews to get a sense of their reliability.

    4) Creative Services

    Many book printing companies offer design assistance, which can be invaluable for creating a professional-looking book cover and interior layout. Opting for a printer that provides these services can save you time and effort, making the journey from manuscript to final piece feel like a breeze.

    Begin Your Book Printing Journey

    By leveraging the flexibility, cost-efficiency, and eco-friendly aspects of on-demand book printing, you can navigate the publishing landscape more effectively and bring your literary creations to eager readers with ease.

    Book printing is now available through Cober Solutions.

    Cober Solutions

    01.23.2026

    What Are Managed Print Services? (And Could They Save You Money?)

    Unmanaged enterprise print is a hidden OpEx drain. Here's how managed print services restore control and financial visibility. Most organizations don’t think about print until it becomes a problem—like a broken printer just before the board meeting, a last-minute brochure request from Sales, or a sensitive document that accidentally ended up in the wrong hands (yikes!). That’s because print lives in an uncomfortable middle ground. It’s mission-critical enough that failures are visible and disruptive, but rarely strategic enough to earn proper ownership. As a result, it becomes fragmented across vendors, departments, and legacy processes. Marketing owns some of it, admin owns some of it, and IT fixes things when they break. But no one is truly accountable for how the whole system runs. On paper, this looks manageable. In reality, it creates operational drag. This is exactly why more enterprise organizations are rethinking how they manage print and turning to Managed Print Services—both as a cost-control exercise and as an operational strategy. Because print isn’t just a collection of machines, vendors, and ad-hoc workflows. It’s a business-critical system that needs ownership, governance, and accountability. In this article, we’ll break down what print management really means, why most organizations are doing it the hard way, and what changes when print is treated like the operational system it actually is. What are managed print services? Managed Print Services is a centralized operating model for how an organization runs print and signage across the business. Instead of print being handled reactively by multiple teams and vendors, it is owned and managed as a single, end-to-end operation with clear accountability, defined standards, and measurable performance. In a managed print environment, a single partner is responsible for how print runs day to day, how it scales as demand grows, and how it improves over time. That includes vendor coordination, workflows, service levels, cost control, security, and reporting. The goal is to make print predictable, reliable, and professionally managed, so it no longer competes for internal time and attention. In practice, Managed Print Services typically looks like this: One accountable owner for the entire print environment: A single partner is responsible for performance, quality, timelines, and outcomes across all print and signage activity.Centralized vendor management and fulfillment: Vendors are coordinated through one operating model with defined service levels, pricing structures, and performance oversight.Standardized workflows and governance: Print requests, approvals, production, and delivery follow documented, repeatable processes instead of ad-hoc coordination.Web-to-print ordering and approvals: Staff can order brand-approved materials through a centralized platform with built-in templates, approvals, and tracking.Cost control and spend visibility: Print usage and spend are tracked in real time, enabling better budgeting, waste reduction, and ongoing optimization.Security and compliance controls: Sensitive documents are handled through formal, auditable processes designed for regulated and high-risk environments.Onsite print centre management (where applicable): Dedicated print teams, equipment oversight, and service-level management embedded directly into the organization. At its simplest, Managed Print Services turns print into a managed operation instead of a daily distraction. If you’re wondering: is all this really necessary? Well, let’s take a look at the alternative approach to managing print in an enterprise environment. The challenge with unmanaged print in an enterprise Ask most organizations what “print management” looks like, and you’ll usually hear some version of this: “We have a few preferred vendors.”“We’ve got an in-house printer room.”“Marketing handles brochures and signage.”“Admin takes care of business cards and forms.”“IT looks after the printers when they break.” On the surface, this feels reasonable, because it’s the way things have always been done. But in this reactive model, print evolves organically, leading to a set of predictable outcomes: Vendors accumulate over time New suppliers get added to solve one-off needs, rush jobs, or specialty requests. Over time, this creates a fragmented vendor ecosystem with inconsistent pricing, variable quality, overlapping capabilities, and no single view of total print spend. Responsibilities blur across teams Marketing owns some materials, while admin handles forms and business cards. Facilities looks after equipment, while IT fixes breakdowns and procurement negotiates contracts. With no clear operating model, accountability becomes shared… and shared accountability usually means no accountability. Processes grow around individual knowledge instead of documented standards Print workflows often live in people’s heads. Someone knows which vendor to call, while someone else knows how to format a job. But when they’re away or leave the organization, the process breaks. What should be a repeatable operation becomes dependent on invisible knowledge. Decisions are made tactically just to keep work moving Under pressure, teams prioritize speed over structure. That means jobs get rushed, vendors are selected based on availability instead of fit, and short-term fixes replace long-term planning. The goal becomes getting through today’s request, not building a better system. Equipment failures create operational bottlenecks Printers and finishing equipment are often mission-critical, yet poorly governed. When something goes down, there’s no formal escalation path, no service-level accountability, and no continuity plan. When that happens, production slows and deadlines slip. As organizations grow, this reactive model becomes even harder to sustain. Volume increases, service expectations rise, and complexity multiplies across departments, vendors, and locations. Print begins competing for leadership attention instead of operating quietly in the background, and internal teams spend more time coordinating, troubleshooting, and firefighting than they should. Eventually, most organizations realize they don’t actually have a print strategy at all. They simply have a printer room, a long vendor list, and a system that only works because people are working around it. But here’s the good news: there is a better way. What changes when print is properly managed When print is treated like an operational system instead of a side project, the shift is immediate and measurable. Instead of reacting to requests, teams operate within a structured, predictable environment. And instead of chasing vendors, workflows, and approvals, they rely on a centralized model that is designed to scale. For leadership, this means print stops competing for attention. It runs quietly in the background with the same discipline as other critical functions like IT, facilities, or finance. Performance is measured, issues are escalated through formal channels, and service levels are defined and enforced. For operations teams, it means fewer fire drills. No more last-minute vendor scrambles, equipment failures without backup plans, or job queues that grind productivity to a halt. Print becomes reliable and repeatable, even during peak periods. For finance and procurement, it means real visibility into spend. Print usage is tracked, costs are consolidated, and pricing is negotiated at scale. Even better: waste drastically reduces. For the CFO, this means print budgets become predictable instead of reactive. For marketing and communications, it means brand consistency at scale. When print is managed centrally and equipped with the right tools—like a web-to-print platform—brand templates are controlled, files are kept up to date, and print ordering is centralized. Every printed piece that goes into the field reflects the brand as it should. And for IT and compliance teams, it means sensitive documents are handled through formal, auditable processes designed for security, privacy, and regulatory environments. And the big bonus? IT spends less time troubleshooting printer paper jams and more time on strategic initiatives. Managed Print Services is an operating model, not a vendor relationship It might be easy to assume that Managed Print Services means outsourcing to a few print vendors or installing better printers. In reality, it’s about adopting a new operating model for how print runs across the enterprise. True Managed Print Services brings: Central ownershipDefined governanceOperational disciplinePerformance accountabilityContinuous optimization Instead of coordinating print, a managed print partner—like WCD—owns it all. They are responsible for how print runs day to day, how it scales as demand grows, and how it evolves as the organization changes. They manage vendors, workflows, service levels, equipment, security, reporting, and cost control through a single operating framework. This is what turns print from a collection of transactions into a professionally run operation. Need a managed print partner? More enterprise organizations are moving away from fragmented, reactive print environments and toward Managed Print Services as a long-term operational strategy. They are recognizing that print deserves the same level of structure, ownership, and accountability as any other critical business function. That’s exactly where WCD comes in. We run print as a managed operation—end to end. From onsite print centre management and vendor coordination to web-to-print platforms, security, and performance oversight, we assume full ownership of your print environment so it becomes predictable, scalable, and professionally run.

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    12.19.2025

    5 Signs It’s Time to Digitize Your Corporate Mailroom

    Your mailroom is sending red flags. It’s time for a digital glow-up. Some parts of corporate work have evolved seemingly overnight, yet the mailroom has stayed… stagnant. Paper arrives, someone sorts it, someone forwards it, and everyone waits for information that should already be moving. In an era of automation and hybrid work, that alone should raise a few red flags. Even if your mail volume isn’t massive, your corporate mailroom may be slowing your organization down far more than you realize. The trouble is, the inefficiencies often hide in plain sight: approvals get delayed because an envelope didn’t get opened in time, invoices go missing and rack up late fees, or documents disappear into black-hole folders with no trace of where they went—or why. A digital mailroom solves these issues by capturing, classifying, and routing documents automatically. But knowing when it’s officially time to make the switch isn’t always obvious. If any of the signs below sound familiar, your mailroom might be sending you a few red flags of its own. Let’s take a closer look. Sign #1 — Mail delays are slowing down critical business processes If documents aren’t reaching the right people fast enough, you feel it everywhere. Invoices sit unopened for days, pushing back payment cycles. HR letters wait for someone to scan and forward them. Legal notices get passed from desk to desk before they ever make it into the right workflow. These delays might seem small in isolation, but collectively they slow down the entire organization. Approvals take longer, onboarding stalls, and teams spend more time following up than actually moving work forward. A digital mailroom eliminates these bottlenecks by capturing and routing documents the moment they arrive—whether they land on paper, through email, or via a digital form. Instead of waiting hours or days, your team gets what they need in minutes, keeping business processes on schedule and reducing the risk of missed deadlines. Sign #2 — Your team spends too much time sorting, scanning, and searching If your staff is spending a surprising amount of time opening envelopes, scanning pages, renaming files, and forwarding attachments, that’s a clear sign your mailroom is working against your productivity. Manual handling creates a hidden layer of admin work that grows over time. Someone has to triage the morning mail. Someone has to scan multi-page documents. Someone has to figure out which department an attachment belongs to. And when something gets misfiled? Someone has to stop what they’re doing and go hunting for it. This is both tedious and costly. Highly skilled employees end up spending hours each week on repetitive tasks that automation can handle instantly and far more accurately. With a digital mailroom, every document follows a standardized, automated workflow from the moment it arrives. No more full inboxes, no more manual file naming, and no more “Has anyone seen this letter!?” Everything lands where it needs to go, consistently. Sign #3 — You don’t have visibility into where documents go or who’s accessing them Traditional mailrooms come with unavoidable blind spots. Once a document is opened, scanned, or passed along, it becomes difficult to track who handled it, where it was stored, or whether it reached the right person at all. And when something goes missing? There’s usually no easy way to retrace its steps. This lack of visibility creates real risks for organizations that handle sensitive information. Compliance teams have limited insight, leaders can’t answer simple questions about document status, and employees waste time searching shared drives, email chains, or physical folders for files that should be easy to find. A digital mailroom closes these gaps. Every document is captured, logged, and tracked from intake to delivery. Access is permission-based, actions are timestamped, and full audit trails make reporting straightforward. If someone needs to know where a document is—or who last viewed it—the answer is just a click away. This is visibility for the sake of privacy, accuracy, and operational accountability. Sign #4 — Hybrid work has made your existing process unmanageable Physical mail was designed for a workplace where everyone sat under one roof. In a hybrid environment, that model breaks down quickly. Documents meant for remote or off-site staff sit at headquarters waiting to be opened, scanned, or forwarded, slowing down routine workflows and delaying decisions. Teams end up creating workarounds—couriers, emailed scans, shared-drive folders—but these solutions still rely on someone being physically present and manually managing the flow of information. The result is a patchwork process that adds effort without adding efficiency. A digital mailroom eliminates these friction points by capturing and routing documents electronically the moment they arrive. Employees receive what they need securely from anywhere, without delays or extra steps. In a hybrid world, this level of accessibility is the new baseline for keeping work moving. Sign #5 — Costs are rising, and not where they should be Mail may seem inexpensive, but the hidden costs add up quickly. Manual sorting, scanning, and couriering take time, and that time often comes from skilled employees who have far more valuable work to do. Add in recurring expenses like offsite storage, paper handling, and physical filing, and the true cost of the mailroom becomes much higher than it appears on paper. These inefficiencies also create downstream financial impacts. Slow invoice processing can affect cash flow.Delayed approvals can hold up projectsMissing documents can lead to compliance issues or costly rework. Essentially, what feels like a small administrative gap often creates ripple effects across the organization. Digitizing the mailroom turns these unpredictable, labour-heavy costs into a streamlined, automated process. By replacing manual handling with instant capture and routing, your organization can reduce operating expenses, free up staff capacity, and move closer to its sustainability goals. How many of these signs feel familiar? If even one of these challenges shows up in your day-to-day operations, your mailroom is likely creating more friction than value. And honestly, most organizations don’t even realize it until they compare their existing process to what a modern, automated workflow can do. So, what exactly is a digital mailroom? To keep it simple, a digital mailroom: Captures every document at the source, whether it arrives on paper, by email, or through a digital formUses AI to classify and extract key information, turning raw documents into structured, searchable dataRoutes each item automatically to the right team, person, or business system—no scanning queues or forwarding chainsProvides full visibility and audit trails so you always know where documents are and who has accessed themSupports hybrid teams with secure, anywhere access to informationReduces manual effort and operational costs, freeing staff to focus on higher-value work If you want a deeper dive into the mechanics, check out this article on how digital mailrooms work. Ready to bring more speed, structure, and visibility to your mailroom? 📩 Modernizing your mailroom could mean removing one of the last hidden bottlenecks in your operational workflow. When documents move instantly, securely, and with full traceability, the impact shows up everywhere. WCD’s Managed Digital Mailroom, powered by Ondox™, brings all of this together in a turnkey service that gets your organization up and running in as little as five days. We handle the intake, automation rules, monitoring, and daily operations, so your mailroom becomes a seamless, self-running part of your business. If you’re ready to see what digitizing your mailroom could unlock, here are a few ways to take the next step: Explore WCD’s Managed Digital Mailroom servicesUse our Digital Mailroom Cost Savings Calculator to estimate your savingsBook a discovery call to see how quickly your organization can make the shift Because when your mailroom moves faster, your business does too.

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    12.18.2025

    Innovation Without the Hype: Why Progress Matters More than Buzzwords

    Innovation has never held more promise than it does today. Advances in technology, automation and AI are enabling new ways of working and new possibilities for organizations willing to embrace change. At the same time, leaders are being asked to navigate this historical time with thoughtful reflection, ensuring innovation leads to progress that is meaningful, human and sustainable. In a recent episode of C-Suite Unplugged, WCD's President and CEO, Karen Brookman, offers a grounded perspective that cuts through the noise. Her message is clear and optimistic: Real innovation is not about hype or speed alone, it is about embracing change with purpose, improving how work actually gets done, and creating better outcomes that last. Too often, innovation is framed as a dramatic leap that must happen overnight. In practice, the most successful transformations look quite different. They unfold through disciplined choices, steady progress, occasional breakthroughs, and a deep understanding of workflows, business objectives and culture. In Karen’s view, innovation is a mindset of continuous improvement, not a one-time event. Karen speaks candidly about the tension leaders face in a world moving at unprecedented speed. New technologies—including AI—are advancing quickly, and the pressure to adapt and stay relevant is real. But progress without clarity comes at a cost. When innovation outpaces people’s ability to adapt, it creates fear, burnout and resistance. "It’s one thing to say we are living in the new world of AI and we are going to move forward in that direction, but when things are moving so fast, leaders have to ask not only, 'Are we moving fast enough?’ but also, 'Are we doing it well?'" — Karen Brookman, President & CEO What Innovation Gets Wrong Most Often Innovation isn’t about novelty. New tools alone don’t create better outcomes.Speed isn’t the same as progress. Moving fast without a clear purpose often creates rework and frustration.Implementation isn’t adoption. Solutions only matter if people feel confident, capable, and supported to use them. One of the key insights from the podcast is the distinction between implementing technology and truly adopting it. Many organizations invest heavily in new systems, only to find them underused or bypassed entirely. The result isn’t transformation, it’s fatigue. Innovation that sticks must be designed with people at the centre. As technology becomes embedded in every role, a new reality is emerging: learning about technology is no longer optional. It is a shared responsibility across the organization. What Disciplined Innovation Looks Like Instead In the podcast, Karen reframes innovation as a leadership discipline. In practice, this means maintaining a long-term view aligned to clear goals, designing change around real workflows, and solving practical problems before pursuing abstract future states. It means encouraging creativity while introducing technology changes as a foundation to help people work smarter, faster and better. Disciplined innovation requires empathy. People fear change when they feel threatened or fear losing relevance. Strong leaders address this directly by creating opportunities, investing in training and helping people move toward higher-value work. Innovation succeeds when people can grow and thrive alongside it. Innovation Without Hype Requires Restraint Leaders must be willing to: Thoughtfully bridge legacy ways of working with future state possibilitiesSay no to tools that don’t serve a clear purpose or goalFocus on long-term value over short-term opticsCreate space for experimentation and learningEncourage a culture of adaptability, curiosity, and thoughtful risk-taking This approach isn’t flashy, but it builds trust. When teams see innovation as a pathway to the future, they are more engaged. When change feels purposeful and motivating, momentum follows. A More Human View of Innovation The conversation also touches on AI, not as a silver bullet, but as a tool that can contribute to a positive view of the future. Karen is optimistic about the human side of innovation and people’s ability to learn new skills, and build healthier, more rewarding and more productive workplaces. WCD’s approach to back office optimization is what real innovation, thoughtfully implemented and adopted, can achieve. Perhaps the most refreshing idea from the episode is this: innovation doesn’t have to be a disruptive moonshot to be meaningful. Some of the most powerful innovation happens behind the scenes, in the back office. By improving essential work, reducing friction, and applying automation where it truly supports people, organizations can unlock opportunities hidden within everyday operations. This is the essence of WCD’s back-office optimization: practical innovation that strengthens both the business and the people behind it. 🎧 Listen to the full conversation with Karen Brookman on C-Suite Unplugged to learn a bit about her journey in becoming the President & CEO of her family business, and hear her unpack what it takes to move forward with confidence without losing sight of the people behind the process. Listen to it online, through Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to your favourite podcasts.

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