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You saved SGD 28 on 500 name cards. You’ve been quietly thinking about the look on that prospect’s face when they held one — the card stock was noticeably thin — ever since. That meeting didn’t go the way you hoped.
The name says it all. KiasuPrint is built around the Singapore instinct of getting the best deal — and for a certain category of print jobs, that’s entirely appropriate. No business should be overpaying for internal draft documents. Price sensitivity is rational. But there’s a line where “kiasu” on printing crosses from smart to shortsighted, and understanding exactly where that line sits is worth a few minutes of your time.
What KiasuPrint gets right
Competitive pricing on commodity print jobs. For straightforward, high-volume runs where cost-per-unit is the only metric that matters and the print will never be seen by a customer — internal notices, draft documents, bulk information sheets — the pricing model delivers what it promises. Low price, acceptable output, job done.
The problem with “acceptable”
Acceptable is fine when the stakes are low. It’s a different matter when they’re not. Your name cards go to every potential client you meet. Your brochure sits on a prospect’s desk after your sales meeting ends. Your company profile is what the procurement manager reviews before recommending you for a tender.
The silent judgment you never hear
Thin card stock that bends in a wallet. Colours that shift slightly from your brand palette. Edges with a faint roughness from a blade not quite calibrated. Individually, each is minor. Together, they compose an impression — “this company doesn’t invest in details.” That assessment happens in seconds, below conscious thought, and it influences what comes next in a business relationship in ways that are genuinely difficult to reverse.
The hidden cost of cheap printing
Beyond quality, there’s the cost of recourse. When an order from a budget printer arrives with a problem — wrong stock, uneven cutting, a colour that didn’t match — the typical response involves standard lead times for any reprint, no expedited resolution, and significant back-and-forth before anything is actioned. You saved twenty dollars on the initial order and potentially spent a morning on emails and still missed your event deadline.
The arithmetic of “cheap printing” must include the cost of problems. At a printer with a formal guarantee, problems are resolved at the printer’s expense. At a low-margin operation, every reprint absorbs profit they don’t have to spare — and that affects how urgently your problem gets solved.
ExpressPrint: where affordability and accountability co-exist
ExpressPrint isn’t the most expensive printer in Singapore, nor does it try to be. What it offers is the combination that actually serves businesses: pricing that is transparent and competitive (real-time quotes, no hidden fees), quality that is consistent over time, and a triple guarantee — quality, delivery, price — that means problems are solved at the printer’s expense, not yours.
For internal documents — print wherever the economics make sense
But for anything that leaves your office and represents your business in front of someone else — name cards, brochures, company profiles — the decision deserves a fuller calculation than unit cost alone.
Brand-facing products that demand consistent quality:
Premium name cardsStandard name cardsBrochures & flyersCompany profile booklets







