Small and mid-sized businesses often get stuck between two frustrating options: spend too much on printing to keep materials looking sharp, or cut costs and end up with invoices, proposals, menus, or sales sheets that look “cheap”. The good news is reducing print spend without downgrading quality is possible, all that is needed is to manage printing like any other operational cost: track it, standardize it, and optimize it.
Here are a few proven ways SMBs can lower printing costs while keeping a professional finish that reflects well on their brand.
Standardize “default” print settings & lock them in
A surprising amount of printing waste comes from inconsistent settings. One employee prints everything in color, another prints single-sided by default, and another uses “high quality photo” mode for regular documents. The resulting inconsistency shows up as higher toner usage, more paper burn, and more reprints.
Simple company-wide defaults that balance quality and cost could be:
- Black and white as default (color by exception)
- Duplex (double-sided) as default
- Draft/standard mode as default, with “high quality” reserved for client-facing pieces
- Grayscale for internal decks (especially large slide printouts)
If possible, enforcing defaults at the device or print server level is ideal so people don’t need to keep remembering. Quality is preserved where it is crucial and expensive “accidental upgrades” on everyday prints can be eliminated.
Reduce “reprint cycles” by identifying & fixing the causes
Many SMBs don’t realize how much money is lost to reprinting (a jam that ruins a page mid-run, streaky toner that forces a redo, misfeeds that skew alignment, or low-quality settings that produce an unprofessional first draft).
Reprints cost you twice due to both supplies and time being lost. The fix is not to try to print less, but to remove the triggers that lead to reprints:
- Use the right paper type for the job (don’t run thick stock like standard copy paper)
- Keep devices maintained (rollers, fusers, feed paths)
- Replace consumables before print quality degrades (streaks, fading, blotches)
- Use reliable drivers and consistent presets
A stable print environment reduces the hidden costs that SMBs accept as normal and help printing become much more cost-efficient.
Consolidate devices (fewer machines & better utilization)
It’s common to see an SMB with several small desktop printers scattered around the office, often purchased as quick fixes over time. Desktop printers can be convenient, but they’re typically expensive per page, harder to manage, and easier for people to misuse.
Consolidating to fewer, higher-capacity multifunction devices can lower cost per page while improving output consistency (which is part of quality). With a strategic printer fleet, businesses also gain:
- Better scanning workflows
- Faster print speeds for busy teams
- More consistent color profiles and finishing
- Centralized monitoring for supplies/service
The key is right-sizing a printer fleet – one or two workhorse devices often outperform a handful of smaller printers that constantly need toner and troubleshooting.
Maintain guardrails on color printing (without banning it)
Color is valuable when intentional, but color is also where costs can balloon significantly. The solution isn’t a “no color” policy; but a “smart color” policy.
This approach can maximize the value of color usage and minimize the cost:
- Default to B/W, require manual selection for color
- Set color permissions by role (marketing may need it, accounting may not)
- Use color only for final versions, not internal drafts
- Encourage digital review for edits, print only final client-ready copies
- Create templates designed to look great in B/W (high contrast, readable charts)
This keeps your brand materials sharp while preventing expensive color usage for everyday internal printing.
Use templates & print-ready files to avoid “design” waste
If a small business team regularly prints proposals, service sheets, onboarding packets, or menus, the fastest savings often come from design consistency. Poor formatting can trigger more pages than necessary, awkward spacing, unreadable text, and reprints due to layout issues.
A template system helps a business:
- Standardize fonts and spacing for readability
- Optimize margins to reduce page count
- Ensure images are the right resolution (not blurry, not oversized)
- Keep branding consistent without overusing heavy graphics
Professional output without professional waste requires treating document design like an operational asset and not as optional.
Audit monthly print volume and match it to the right plan
Many SMBs don’t measure or review how many pages they print each month or what it costs. Printing feels “small” compared to payroll and rent until the time is taken to add up paper, toner, service calls, downtime, and replacement purchases.
A basic monthly audit should answer:
- How many total pages printed
- What percentage is color vs B/W
- What departments print the most
- How many service issues occurred
- What is the effective cost per page
Once a business identifies their actual patterns in print, it can align equipment and service plans accordingly, avoiding both underpowered setups (downtime and reprints) and overpriced plans that don’t match usage.
For SMBs ready to professionalize this area, exploring print solutions for business can provide a structured way to manage hardware, service, and consumables as one predictable program instead of constant one-off purchases.
Improve scanning/digital workflows to reduce print-first habits
A lot of printing in SMBs is simply habit: print to sign, print to review, print to file. When businesses introduce easier digital alternatives, print volume often drops naturally without the need to sacrifice professionalism.
High-impact changes in print habits include:
- Digital signature tools for approvals
- Scan-to-email and scan-to-folder presets that employees actually use
- Shared cloud folders and standardized file naming
- Digital invoicing and statements where appropriate
- “Print only final” team norms
While going paperless overnight is not feasible, reducing unnecessary pages and keeping printing focused on moments where hard copy adds real value can bring significant reduction in costs for businesses.
Proactively manage maintenance to keep quality high and costs low
Nothing detracts from professional quality like streaks, faded text, or lines on pages, especially when printing client-facing documents under deadlines. Many SMBs wait until printing equipment breaks, leading to expensive emergencies and rushed decisions.
A proactive approach to printing equipment maintenance includes:
- Scheduled cleaning and routine checks
- Early replacement of worn parts (rollers, fusers, drums)
- Automatic supplies monitoring (no last-minute toner runs)
- A defined service response process when issues occur
- User training for simple fixes (clearing jams correctly, loading paper properly)
When a business has stable printing equipment, it prints fewer redo pages, fewer test prints, and fewer low-quality drafts that hurt your presentation.
Businesses want to cut printing costs without using cheaper materials that lack sufficient quality or accepting lower standards. Instead, removing waste in the printing processes businesses rely on yield cost savings more effectively. SMBs that implement some or all of these strategies to reduce print costsl typically see noticeable reductions in monthly spend while producing cleaner, more consistent materials. Meanwhile, proposals, invoices, and marketing pieces still look polished every time. Printing poses fewer frustrating challenges and instead works as a quiet advantage in business operations.