Retail Print & Labelling

Retail print & labelling is the process of creating and applying labels to products in a retail environment. This includes labels for products on shelves, price tags, shelf edge labels, and promotional labels. Retail print & labelling is an important part of the retail process, as it helps to ensure that products are properly identified and priced. It also helps to create a visually appealing and informative shopping experience for customers. A label printer is a computer printer that prints on self-adhesive label material and/or card-stock (tags). Label printers have a wide variety of applications, including retail supply chain management, retail price marking, packaging labels, blood and laboratory specimen marking, and fixed assets management. 

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Sato launches Linux and Mac OS X drivers for thermal printers

1 Sato launches Linux and Mac OS X drivers for thermal printers

Sato, the barcode printing, labelling, and EPC/RFID solutions provider, has launched new Sato CUPS Drivers which enable customers to easily print labels from Linux and Mac OS X systems to its printers.

Sato announces strategic investment in Nexgen Packaging

2 Sato announces strategic investment in Nexgen Packaging

Sato, the barcode printing, labelling, and EPC/RFID solutions provider, has announced its strategic investment in Nexgen Packaging, a global provider of apparel brand identification and packaging products.

Sign and Label printer for large-format, multicolour printing

3 Sign and Label printer for large-format, multicolour printing

Brady has introduced the BBP™85 Sign and Label Printer, its all-new large-format, multicolour thermal transfer printer. The BBP85 Printer has an exceptionally easy-to-use touch-screen interface and can print multi-coloured signs and labels up to 254 mm wide.

Top 10 label printers for your business – a brief overview of their features

4 Top 10 label printers for your business – a brief overview of their features

Are you on the hunt for the ideal label printer for your business? Go through the list of top 10 label printers provided below, and choose the one(s) that you require.

Zebra Technologies delivers one million RTLS tags to improve customers' business performance

5 Zebra Technologies delivers one million RTLS tags to improve customers' business performance

Zebra Technologies Corporation has achieved a major milestone in delivering its one-millionth real-time locating systems (RTLS) tag, demonstrating the growing need for operations visibility.

Leader Price opts for Sato's TH2 printers enabling it to comply with the new European labelling regulations

6 Leader Price opts for Sato's TH2 printers enabling it to comply with the new European labelling regulations

Leader Price, a low-price mass retailer with outlets throughout France, wanted to stay ahead of the new European regulations for the labelling of food products, and has selected Sato as its supplier of a comprehensive label printing solution.

New power unit brings mobility to Datamax-O'Neil's E-Class Mark III desktop printer

7 New power unit brings mobility to Datamax-O'Neil's E-Class Mark III desktop printer

Datamax-O'Neil, a global provider of industrial grade label and receipt printing solutions, has announced the availability of the MPU-4000, a fully integrated battery pack that attaches to the bottom of the E-Class Mark III printer, delivering enough power for the printer to operate for days without recharging.

Zebra Technologies adds 'Made for iPhone' certified printers to mobile printer portfolio

8 Zebra Technologies adds 'Made for iPhone' certified printers to mobile printer portfolio

Zebra Technologies Corporation has announced the addition of iMZ220 and iMZ320 to its portfolio of mobile printers.

Datamax-O'Neil introduces the RL3 portable label printer

9 Datamax-O'Neil introduces the RL3 portable label printer

Datamax-O'Neil, provider of industrial grade label and receipt printing solutions, has announced the RL3, a portable 3-inch label printer designed to meet the diverse applications required in the retail mobility environment.

New whitepaper: Data capture solutions and labelling strategies for retailers

10 New whitepaper: Data capture solutions and labelling strategies for retailers

Sato, the barcode printing, labelling and EPC/RFID solutions provider, has published a new whitepaper, Data Capture Solutions and Labelling, which offers retailers advice on how to improve their business process.

Retail Print & Labelling

Global enterprises are looking for ways to reduce costs and improve efficiency and accuracy in their supply chains. To remain competitive, distribution centres, manufacturers, and logistics providers must change the way they label and track goods. Success depends on maximizing efficiency throughout all supply chain operations—front to back. Exploiting mobile labelling technology is fundamental to achieving optimal efficiency.

There are a number of different types of retail labels, each with its own purpose. Some of the most common types of retail labels include:

  • Product labels: These labels identify the product and provide information such as the product name, ingredients, and nutritional information.
  • Price tags: These labels indicate the price of a product.
  • Shelf edge labels: These labels are placed on the edge of shelves to identify products and provide additional information such as the product's weight or size.
  • Promotional labels: These labels are used to promote products or sales. They may include coupons, discounts, or other offers.

Retail print & labelling can be done in-house or outsourced to a printing company. There are a number of factors to consider when choosing a retail print & labelling solution, such as the type of labels needed, the quantity of labels needed, and the turnaround time required.

Here are some of the benefits of retail print & labelling:

  • Increased visibility: Well-designed labels can help to increase the visibility of products on shelves, making them more likely to be noticed by customers.
  • Improved customer experience: Retail labels can help to create a more informative and visually appealing shopping experience for customers.
  • Increased sales: Well-designed labels can help to increase sales by promoting products and sales.
  • Compliance: Retail labels must comply with a variety of regulations, such as food labeling laws.

Wireless bar code and radio frequency identification (RFID) label printing is widely recognised by major retailers globally as an essential technology for enhancing store operations. The ability to print real-time information in the aisle, on demand, saves time, effort, and money—creating competitive advantages.

Mobile printing gives users the flexibility to print materials on demand wherever they may be. Seamless mobility can drive new business processes that improve worker productivity, labelling accuracy, and responsiveness to customer needs.

RFID smart label
RFID Smart label printer/encoders use media that has an RFID inlay (chip and antenna combination) embedded within the label material. An RFID encoder inside the printer writes data to the tag by radio frequency transmission. The transmission is focused for the specific location of the tag within the label. Bar codes, text, and graphics are printed as usual. Printable RFID tags contain a low-power integrated  circuit (IC) attached to an antenna and are enclosed  with protective material (label media) as determined  by the application.

On-board memory within the IC stores data. The IC then transmits/receives information through the antenna to an external reader, called an interrogator. High frequency (HF) tags use antennas made of a small coil of wires, while ultrahigh frequency (UHF) tags contain dipole antennas with a matching wire loop.

Bar code symbols may be produced in a variety of ways: by direct marking, as with laser etching or with ink jet printing; or, more commonly by imaging or printing the bar code symbol onto a separate label. Precision of bar code printing is critical to the overall success of a bar-coding solution.

On-site Printing

On-site printing generally takes place at or near the point of use. The data encoded is usually variable, entered by an operator through a keyboard or downloaded from the host computer. On-site printing most often involves purchasing label-design software as well as printer hardware. Bar code printers come with their own proprietary programming languages that support all the standard symbologies, and they are capable of printing simple data-static or serialized bar code labels on their own.

However, labels that require additional formatted text, graphics, or multiple fields will require a separate label-design software package. Currently, more than 100 packages exist that are designed for a wide range of platforms and have a wider range of features. Once the purview of programmers, label design can now be accomplished by non-programmers via easy-to-use WYSIWYG graphical interfaces.

The most common bar code print technologies for on-site use are:

Direct Thermal — Heating elements in the printhead are selectively heated to form an image made from overlapping dots on a heat-sensitive substrate.

Thermal Transfer — Thermal transfer printing is a digital printing process in which material is applied to paper (or some other material) by melting a coating of ribbon so that it stays glued to the material on which the print is applied. Thermal transfer technology uses much the same type of printhead as direct thermal, except that an intervening ribbon with resin-based or wax-based ink is heated and transfers the image from the ribbon to the substrate. It contrasts with direct thermal printing where no ribbon is present in the process.

Barcode printers with thermal-transfer and direct thermal technology produce accurate, high-quality images with excellent edge definition.

Dot Matrix Impact — A moving printhead, with one or more vertical rows of hammers, produces images by multiple passes over a ribbon. These passes create rows of overlapping dots on the substrate to form an image. Serial dot matrix printers produce images character by character; high-volume dot matrix line printers print an entire line in one pass.

Ink Jet — This technology uses a fixed printhead with a number of tiny orifices that project tiny droplets of ink onto a substrate to form an image made up of overlapping dots. Ink jet printers are used for in-line direct marking on products or containers.

Laser (Xerographic) — The image is formed on an electrostatically charged, photo-conductive drum using a controlled laser beam. The charged areas attract toner particles that are transferred and fused onto the substrate.

Off-site Printing
Generally speaking, commercial label printers may use flexographic, letterpress, offset lithographic, rotogravure, photocomposition, hot stamping, laser etching, or digital processes to produce a consistently higher-grade label than those labels produced by on-site printers.

If the content of the bar code symbol is known ahead of use, a commercial label supplier is generally the best choice. However, there are tradeoffs. Commercially supplied labels have to be ordered, stocked, and placed in inventory. A business with frequent product line changes and/or label changes will have to weigh its options carefully.

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Publisher: +44 (0)208 440 0372
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