The most recent articles from Digital

Monday, June 29, 2009

Now offering 5 percent discount for schools and non-profits

Hi everyone! Hope the summer finds you well.

We've recently assessed our pricing and decided it's time to offer additional savings to non-profits. This includes schools, churches, colleges, charities, or any organization with legitimate non-profit status.

If you're a non-profit placing an order with us, enter the coupon code "np5" to receive 5 percent off your order. Also be sure to include your non-profit ID number in the job comments section.

We used to offer discounts to non-profits, but that was before a dramatic drop in pricing effectively brought ALL orders down to the non-profit rate. Now that's not enough.

Times are tough across the board right now, and often non-profits and charities feel the brunt of a bad economy. We want to be able to give back to the community and the country where we can, and this is just one way in which we do it.

We recently hosted a concert in Northern Wisconsin, featuring free live music all day long to raise money for the local Fire and EMS Departments (money was raised by selling food and beverages).

A couple months back, we had a similar event near our headquarters in Hudson, Wisc., to raise money for the local food bank.

Last summer and the summer before, Docucopies made a substantial donation to the Pinnstock Music and Arts Festival in their effort to raise money for the Urban Arts Academy (donations were made directly to the UAA as well).

Got any ideas for how we can help out further? Let us know what you're thinking and how we can help.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Docucopies Champions Freedom of Speech While Valuing and Protecting the Comfort of Their Team Members

Here at Docucopies we believe strongly in freedom of speech as established and implied by the First Amendment. It is the most important of all our amendments, as it establishes the right to speak up against the government, and the right to freedom of the press, essentially making it an invulnerable tool for political and social change. Without the First Amendment, many of the ones that followed would not have been. (This blog’s author, by the way, carries a B.A. in Journalism and is an avid defender of the Constitution.)

But freedom of the press is a double-edged sword. Inevitably, every printer must make tough choices and set policies about what they will and will not print. Sometimes these choices are based on the beliefs and views of the company’s owners. Other times they are based on the comfort and dignity of the employees who must work on the jobs.

Docucopies has to make choices, too. I remember getting a phone call from a man who wanted to print up handbooks for new members of the KKK. Obviously I rejected his job, probably more politely than I should have. In this case, it was based on both a fundamental disdain for their hateful views (we do not print hate speech) and the comfort of our employees.

From time to time, people also send us racy material, including sexual and/or pornographic material, and expect us to print them. While we as a company make no official judgment on the role these sorts of things play in society, we do have a strict policy to not print them. This is both for the comfort of our team members and the integrity of our business. From a purely legal standpoint, we could be sued by our employees for sexual harassment should we make them work on these sorts of things. (Forcing someone to view sexually offensive material as part of their job is a form of sexual harassment, something we, like all workplaces, have a very strict code on.) But more so, we are a conscious and empathic company who genuinely cares about the comfort and dignity of our employees, whether they’re on the clock or not.

The funny thing is when people assume because of the First Amendment that we are obligated to print whatever they send us. This is simply ludicrous. The First Amendment, among other laws, guarantees our right to deny service. The free market dictates it as well; if one printer will not work with a customer, there’s always another who will.

Because of our output volume, not every single file is inspected for offensive material. And inevitably, as we put out millions of copies a month, some of it might occasionally slip through without our knowledge. So in some cases customers who have had things printed with us before suddenly find that we will not print a new job. This is not reflective of a sudden change in policy. More than likely it’s because some element of the job required taking a closer look at the files, at which point offensive material was discovered. In these cases, we politely inform the customers that we will not print their job.

Obviously this can cause a backlash. Following a recent incident, dozens of posts were made on blogs and forums relating to a certain customer’s niche industry. Random and anonymous people hurled slanderous insults and accusations about our company, creating quite a fervor. Fortunately, a good chunk of these people also defended Docucopies and our policy to not print offensive material. But others clearly had a misconstrued understanding of our policy and incorrectly linked our rejection of said-job to the social and political views of our company and/or our owners, which is just silly. In almost all cases, rejection is for the comfort of our employees and is not intended to be a form of censorship.

After a couple weeks of consideration, we decided to write this blog post in response to the back-and-forth banter coursing through the forums in question.

So, to clarify where we stand:

Docucopies DOES NOT discriminate against customers or their orders on the basis of political affiliation, religion, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender, age, physical disability, or any other factors pertaining to the customers’ personal views, dispositions, or lifestyles or such views as expressed in their files.

Docucopies DOES discriminate against orders which are overtly sexual or pornographic in nature, constitute hate speech, contain illegal material, infringe on copyrights, or any other orders which we reasonably believe might make ANY team member feel uncomfortable, undignified or discriminated against.


Fortunately our team members are all fairly reasonable, moderate people, so it’s rare that this sort of thing arises. But when it does, we feel it’s better to address the issue than to ignore it, as we value quality customer service.

We hope this settles our position on this issue, and we look forward to continuing to serve our customers!

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Thanks to Wendy for Our 500th Testimonial!

We started highlighting testimonials from our customers in 2005 as a way to boost confidence for those who aren't sure about ordering copies online.

Wendy Turner is one of our repeat customers who has been printing with us since June, 2007, and she recently had this to say -- our 500th testimonial:

I am a previous customer and since the first time I tried Docucopies.com, I've been completely hooked. It's the only place I go when I need new copies of menus or fliers. You have such reasonable pricing; I can get beautiful full color menus for a comparable price to a lesser quality black and white made locally. For me, there is no other choice.
Wendy Turner - 6/8/2009

Thanks, Wendy!

Wendy works for Jerry's Pizza in Central South Carolina. If you live in the area and you're hungry, check out Jerry's: http://www.awesomepizza.com.

:)