More

    Latest Posts

    Interior Motives

    Wallpaper print specialist john mark is doing rather well by providing an innovative service. So could any printer with large-format digital capability follow suit?

    John Mark doubled its turnover to £1.4m in the 12
    months leading up to this interview. Its commercial
    director Jason Gilliat reckons that will be doubled
    again this year, which is a good job because its
    investment in print and associated solutions is not
    insignificant. Since MD John Mark Watson set up
    the Lancashire-based specialist wallpaper print business in 2012 it has spent around £1m on hardware
    alone, predominantly on HP latex machines. It has also
    had a bespoke cutter developed and built at a cost of
    £180,000. Add to that the investment in getting an
    AVA CadCam/HP partnership running to develop the
    colour matching capability the company is so proud of.

    But it’s not all about production kit, though digital
    inkjet was the impetus for John Mark Watson to break
    away from his family’s Surface Print Company where
    he was MD “as being of the fourth generation to
    manufacture wallpaper I knew a lot about wallpaper, but
    not so much about digital print because what I’d done
    was all analogue. I left in 2011 and started looking at
    digital equipment, and at Sign and Digital in the summer
    of 2012 I saw the HP LX600 and started playing with
    one at ArtSystems, using files customers who had
    followed me allowed me to use. By July 2012 John
    Mark had a machine and become operational – with me
    printing and just a Cad operator.”

    The company decommissioned that first machine only
    in April this year, the day before installing a HP L1500
    and L570, bringing its kit spec up to four big HP latex
    machines and three smaller ones. But John Mark is not
    a printing company. Well, it is, but it’s not how either
    Watson or Gilliat want it to be seen. The focus is very
    much on it being a ‘wallpaper specialist’.

    “Suppliers telling everyone with a wide-format printer
    that they can do wallpaper is my bugbear,” says Watson.
    “That does real damage in the market. PSPs believe
    the machine sales guy telling them what the machine
    can do and in this business it isn’t just about that to
    be successful. It’s not just about the printing. A lot of it
    is about the trimming and finishing and understanding
    how spot on everything needs to be. We have customers
    who charge £770 per drop for the wallpaper we produce
    for them – so there’s zero tolerance from them when it
    comes to mistakes.

    “I’d say it takes a £500,000 investment to get into
    wallpaper production – apart from the printers you
    need to have the skills, right software, proper trimming
    capability and proper wrapping/packing set-up.”

    You also have to have a bit of vision and to be able to
    hold your nerve when it comes to business development.
    Both Watson and Gilliat understand that you need to be
    able to play the long game when it comes to innovation,
    the only way they believe to retain and attract the type of
    customers it wants.

    “We don’t do stickers for walls. We do high end
    wallpapers and wall coverings and our customers include
    the big five – Osborne and Little, Designers Guild, Cole
    and Sons, Romo and Linwood – plus smaller boutique
    designers,” stresses Watson. “Many want wallpapers to
    match the fabrics they are doing, especially the smaller
    guys. With digital print we can do that. But they also
    want something different, so we have to keep innovating
    and searching for new options.”

    That is largely Gilliat’s remit. A graphic designer
    by trade, he was brought into the business in March
    2016 as business development manager because as
    Watson explains: “I was doing the printing and not able to get out as much as I wanted”. Apart from
    account handling, Gilliat’s role – both then and now as
    commercial director – is product development, and to
    find new clients.

    “Not having a sales background helps,” he laughs.
    “When it comes to talking to designers I’m on their
    wavelength and talk their language. You are judged on
    how you come across not just on what you deliver.”
    That’s why the company rebranded not long after his
    appointment “to modernise our image and attract
    high end design studios.” It’s also why John Mark is
    currently developing a customer suite “where clients
    who are spending a lot of money with us can spend
    time comfortably when they come to check what’s
    coming off the printer.”

    Crucially, John Mark is also constantly developing
    new offerings. “We’re looking at patterns, colour,
    substrates that won’t hit high street retail for years,”
    says Watson, who is somewhat underwhelmed by
    the approach of some substrate suppliers. “Make
    no mistake, some suppliers are great and want us
    to work with them as development guinea pigs if you
    like – they’ll give us materials to try for free and if it
    works we get a head start on using it commercially.
    But some of the ‘new’ stuff some show us has been
    around for years.”

    Gilliat agrees: “We do have to push the envelope
    and be constantly seeking out new options.” That’s
    done online and on foot at shows both home and
    abroad. “I’ve done lots of travel,” adds Gilliat,
    pointing out that pay-back can be some way off.

    “We work on new products, produce samples, walk
    the walk at shows – like Heimtextil, Decorex, Deco
    Off – where our types of customers congregate, make
    the calls and do all the marketing but it can be a long
    haul before business comes in, especially from new
    customers,” says Gilliat, with Watson adding: “Some
    designers can be pretty rude initially, but slowly and
    surely you keep plugging away.”

    “There’s one client that I’ve been plugging away
    at since I got here. They told me they used a local
    printer and would never use us. Now they do,”
    demonstrates Gilliat. “Two years is not an unusual
    timeframe to keep on at one contact.”

    John Mark’s sights are now set on attracting more
    big players and developing its customer-base beyond
    the UK, in particular in Milan, Paris and New York.

    “The small guys tend to come to us organically
    now – they all go to the same shows and know of us
    by word of mouth. More of the big boys are our focus.
    Digital print does mean we can do the sampling and
    shorter runs many of the smaller outfits want of
    course, and from small acorns large oak trees grow,”
    says Gilliat, adding: “and the small designer of today
    may well become a ‘name’ of tomorrow that will bring
    in bigger business so we certainly value them. But
    the smaller bespoke jobs require lots of handholding
    time, and the margin we make on them is not double
    what we make on the bigger volume jobs.”

    About 75% of John Mark’s turnover is from ‘volume’ jobs, which Watson defines as 100-200 rolls per month
    per pattern. There’s a desire to see that type of work
    grow. In terms of market development there’s a keen eye
    being kept on ‘repeating murals’ – easy apply repeats for
    high end domestic settings, as well as for single image
    bespoke murals for the likes of galleries. The digitisation
    and production of historic patterns are also proving a hit,
    as are touchy-feely offerings. “We’ve done a ‘tapestry’
    mural wallpaper where the feel echoes that,” explains
    Gilliat.

    So where would he and Watson like to see further
    development? “Opaques and metallic would be nice,”
    says Gilliat, “and faster machines!” adds Watson. “We
    are printing high-end quality wallpapers here, but it’s
    still slow. We realise there are people working on faster
    machines, with players in the wallpaper analogue market
    working with digital partners to produce high speed
    machines that will cost £2-3m and be really high volume.
    That’s not our market, but even for players like us, speed
    will have to go up so roll price can come down.”

    Latest Posts

    spot_imgspot_img

    Don't Miss

    Stay in touch

    To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.