LAS
VEGAS, NEVADA, U.S.A. – Since opening Las Vegas-based
Pictographics in 1994, Craig Miller has built a world-class business
on a few basic principles: Deliver a better product, go where
the competition isn’t, and always remember that no one gets
to the top alone.
These strategies have catapulted what started as a home-based family
business straight to the forefront of digital printing. The company
has been recognized by the trade and business press alike, and has
been the recipient of Las Vegas’s Small Business of the Year
and Wide-Format Imaging’s Business Excellence awards.
Companies such as Intel, Microsoft, IBM, Ford, DaimlerChrysler, General
Motors, LG Electronics, Nokia and others spend millions with Pictographics
each year to build a better image – and they return time and
again for one simple reason.
“We offer extremely large companies digital printing capabilities
they simply can not find anywhere else,” Miller said. “That
has been our goal since the beginning and remains our goal today.”
Miller’s business model is this: apply digital imaging to virtually
anything. Accordingly, Pictographics is a recognized pioneer
in the field of dye sublimation with a state-of-the-art shop that includes
Roland inkjets and a 3.3 meter roll-to-roll heat press, one of the
industry’s largest. The company has printed on virtually
any available substrate, and even produces custom wall coverings for
architects today including ACTM certifications for safety, durability
and sheen. “We’re very good at controlling sheen,
a critical factor in the world of architecture as well as for televised
events,” Miller said.
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Though Pictographics made its mark originally in the vehicle graphics
and casino markets, half of the company’s business today is derived
from sporting and entertainment events – the bigger, the better.
Producers of the Fiesta Bowl, BCS National Championships, the NFL Pro
Bowl, NBA All Star Games, HBO’s Comedy Specials and other large,
televised events frequently call on Pictographics to transform an arena
or stage into a visual extravaganza.
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| Sublimated graphics included this expansive tunnel cover. |
Similarly, Fortune 500 companies sporting mammoth trade show booths
come to Pictographics to make sure they visually dominate their competition. But
Pictographics offers more than just super-wide-format impact. The
company truly specializes in “specializing.” Which
is why Phoenix Custom Apparel employs Pictographics to produce more
than 1,000 racing uniforms each month for Indy Car racing as well as
the NHRA and AHRA.
“We have one client that orders over 600,000 square feet of promotional
point-of-sale graphics each year,” Miller said. “These
graphics go into 12,000 locations. This is where our business
is focused. We are making a concerted effort to go after a select
group of very large customers. At the end of 2006, we had 500
customers. Our goal is to get down to 50 this year – the
top 50.”
Top Pictographics customers increasingly come from the events industry
and today include worldwide trade show and event companies such as
George P. Johnson, Imagination and Flying Colors.
Representatives from Flying Colors originally came to Pictographics
last fall looking for a printer capable of producing 80,000 square
feet of sublimated graphics – just enough to virtually “wrap” the
2006 Fiesta Bowl, including the fronts of the end zones – with
digitally dyed textiles.