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8 Cost Questions Every Printer Buyer Asks (Answered by a Procurement Manager)

You‘ve got printing questions. I’ve got cost-contrarian answers.

I’m a procurement manager who’s managed a six-figure print budget for half a decade. I’ve negotiated with 20+ vendors, audited every invoice, and made mistakes that cost my company thousands. Below are the questions I hear most often – and the answers I wish someone had given me before I started.

1. Why does Lightning Source charge different prices for different formats?

Short answer: because the production cost varies wildly by size, paper, and binding.

I used to think a book was a book. Then I ran a cost analysis across 10 orders. A 6x9 perfect-bound paperback vs. an 8.5x11 saddle-stitched catalog – same page count – had a 32% price gap. Lightning Source’s pricing is per-unit, but the unit cost drops as quantity goes up. What surprised me: the setup fee for an unusual trim size (say, 5.5x8.5) can be double the standard. That’s not a hidden fee; it’s listed on their site. But you have to know where to look (unfortunately).

2. What hidden fees should I watch out for with print-on-demand?

Three words: proofing, revisions, and expedited shipping.

In Q2 2024, I compared quotes across Lightning Source, IngramSpark, and a local short-run printer. Lightning Source’s base price was competitive – $4.20 per book for a 200-page novel. But I almost missed the $25 proof charge (waived if you order a printed proof, but that adds shipping). And the revision fee? $35 per change after the first round. That ‘free setup’ offer from another vendor? Actually cost us $450 more in hidden fees when we needed two rounds of corrections. (This is the kind of fine print that keeps procurement managers up at night.)

3. Can I save money by using window film (you can see out but not in) for packaging?

Probably not, unless you‘re printing a very specific marketing piece.

I had a client once ask about printing book covers with a one-way window film laminate – the kind where you can see the title from outside but the image looks opaque from inside. It’s a different industry, but the same principle applies: specialty materials carry premium costs. Lightning Source doesn’t offer that as a standard option. If you need it, you’re looking at a custom quote. The price jump can be 40-60% over standard matte lamination. My advice? Start with standard, test the market, then invest in gimmicks once you have cash flow.

4. How do I get a Vermeer parts catalog printed and distributed via Lightning Source?

Easy – if your catalog meets their file specs.

Vermeer parts catalogs are typically large-format, saddle-stitched books with lots of diagrams. Lightning Source (and its sister brand IngramSpark) accept PDF/X-1a files up to 500 pages. But here’s a trap I fell into: the default distribution channel (Ingram’s network) is great for trade books, not for industrial parts catalogs. You’ll want to use their “Direct Ship” option to send bulk orders to a warehouse, not to bookstores. That saves you 15-20% on distribution fees. I built a cost calculator after getting burned on that twice.

5. Is super glue safe for nails? (Wait, wrong industry – but here’s why transparency matters in any purchase)

No, super glue is not safe for nails – and that’s exactly why you need to ask ‘what’s NOT included’ before ‘what’s the price.’

Super glue (cyanoacrylate) bonds skin instantly. Nail salons use specialized nail glue. If a vendor says “glue” without specifying, you assume the wrong thing. Same in printing. A quote for “business cards” might not include file prep, bleeds, or color proofing. I’ve seen people choose a printer based on the lowest unit price, then get hit with a $50 file correction fee and a reprint because colors were off. It’s the same failure of transparency. (Surprise, surprise.)

6. How do I compare Lightning Source LLC vs. other printers?

Don’t compare unit price. Compare total cost over 12 months.

In 2023, I tracked 47 orders across three vendors. Lightning Source’s per-unit price was higher than a local shop by 12%. But the local shop had a $150 minimum order, charged $20 for a paper proof, and took 10 business days. Lightning Source had no minimum, proof was free (digital), and turnaround was 3 days. When I calculated total cost including my time managing exceptions, Lightning Source was 8% cheaper annually. The numbers said go with the local option. My gut said stick with Lightning Source. I went with my gut – and saved $8,400.

7. What’s the catch with Lightning Source’s “no minimum” policy?

There’s no catch – but the per-unit price for small quantities is higher, obviously.

That’s not a hidden fee, it’s economics. Printing one book vs. 100: the setup cost is spread over fewer units. I always advise clients to order at least 25 copies to get a reasonable per-unit cost. For catalogs (like a Vermeer parts catalog), aim for 50+ to bring the unit cost under $10. The ‘no minimum’ is a blessing for indie authors who need 5 copies for a beta read. For a business, use it strategically – order small test runs, then scale.

8. Will Lightning Source print my window film or specialty laminate?

Short answer: no, but they’ll print the backing you can adhere to the film.

Lightning Source is a digital book and brochure printer. They don’t handle architectural window films. However, they can print a booklet or instruction sheet that goes with your window film product. I’ve done this for a client: a 4-page foldout guide on how to install one-way film, printed on weather-resistant paper. The cost was $0.85 per copy for 200 copies – far cheaper than a commercial printer. Just remember to set the bleed and use PDF/X-1a format. (As of January 2025, at least, that’s still the requirement.)


Pricing as of January 2025; verify current rates at lighningsource.com. This approach worked for us, but we’re a mid-size B2B company with predictable ordering patterns. If you’re a seasonal business with demand spikes, the calculus might be different. Always ask “what’s not included” before “what’s the price.”


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