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	<title>Star Label Blog</title>
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		<title>Star Label Focus on Food and Cosmetics</title>
		<link>http://www.starlabel.com/blog/star-label-focus-on-food-and-cosmetics/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Dec 2010 19:22:09 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A Pennsylvania converter, focusing on food and cosmetics, has the capacity and speed to meet the swift turnaround needs of its customers. Originally written on by Jack Kenny in the Label and Narrow website Star Label Products has one of &#8230; <a href="http://www.starlabel.com/blog/star-label-focus-on-food-and-cosmetics/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>A Pennsylvania converter, focusing on food and cosmetics, has the   capacity and speed to meet the swift turnaround needs of its customers.</h2>
<p><strong>Originally written on by Jack Kenny in the <a href="http://www.labelandnarrowweb.com/articles/2008/05/star-label-products" target="_blank">Label and Narrow</a> website</strong></p>
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<td valign="top">Star Label Products has one of the cleanest label plants anywhere.   Perhaps the cleanest. It&#8217;s a point of pride and a good business tool.   The company makes labels for food companies, generic pharmaceutical   businesses, and the cosmetics industry. When customers come to the plant   – and they do so on a regular basis – they see it shine.</td>
<td valign="top"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-10" title="Star1" src="http://www.starlabel.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/Star1.jpg" alt="Star Label facility" width="250" height="90" /></td>
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<p>Shev Okumus is the president of Star Label Products, a converting   company with 30 employees and annual sales of about $7 million. The   company is located in Fairless Hills, PA, USA, in the far eastern part   of the state. It operates out of a spacious 37,000 square foot building   custom designed for the company in 2002. What began as a simple business   with one press is now a streamlined operation with nine presses.</p>
<p>Shev is the son of Don Okumus, who founded the business in 1972. Don had   come to the USA from Turkey five years earlier, working various jobs,   and finding himself picking up valuable experience at printing   companies. He and a friend decided to go out on their own, and bought a   Mark Andy 800 series press. Not long afterward, the partner left, and   Don Okumus became a sole proprietor.</p>
<p>Star Label Products rented and owned some small storefront locations in   the early years, all in Philadelphia, PA, including a former movie   theater at one point. One location burned down, but they were able to   salvage the printing equipment. In 1979 it purchased a 10,000 square   foot building in the northeast part of the city, and later added 3,000   square feet to it. That was as far as the company was able to expand,   and by the end of the 20th Century they were desperate for more space.</p>
<p>In the early days, Don was running the three-color press for 12 hours a   day, and selling labels for the other 12 while the partner ran the   press, Shev says. &#8220;They didn&#8217;t have any sales people. It was just the   two of them. My dad worked with a couple of brokers who gave him a fair   amount of business.&#8221; Food labels composed the bulk of the business back   then, and the work involved a lot of price labels.</p>
<p>Shev Okumus was a fixture at his father&#8217;s label company from his   earliest years. &#8220;I grew up in the business. I was hanging out in the   shop for as long as I can remember. I got to know everyone, and there   are people here today who have known me since I was a kid. In high   school I got into a work program so that I could skip the last two   classes and come to work. I started in the packaging area, then went to   finishing equipment. Then I was in charge of finishing, shipping and   receiving. When I graduated from high school I started in sales. It   wasn&#8217;t easy, but I was young and didn&#8217;t have any fear. I just kept   moving up, and then became vice president.&#8221; Shev has been president for   the past nine years. Don is still active, showing up for work at 6 a.m.,   but lately enjoying extended vacations, his son says.</p>
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<p><div id="attachment_12" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 260px"><img class="size-full wp-image-12  " title="Star2" src="http://www.starlabel.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/Star2.jpg" alt="Star Label Product's leaders, from left: Irv Magill, VP sales; Don Okumus, VP and founder; Shev Okumus, president; Ralph Wehner, VP manufacturing" width="250" height="166" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Star Label Products</p></div></td>
<td align="left" valign="top">In 2002, the team from Star Label prepared for a big event. The new   building was ready for occupancy, and the 15 employees were looking   forward to the move. In order to make the transition seamless, the   Okumus team did something a bit unusual. They had gotten in touch with   Mark Andy much earlier and ordered five new presses, for delivery to the   new plant in Fairless Hills. When four of them were up and running,   that&#8217;s when the Philadelphia plant closed its doors and everyone took up   their duties in the new facility. Some of the old presses were sold,   some came with them.</p>
<p>Today the company has nine printing presses, and one diecutting press,   all from Mark Andy. The most recent is an LP3000, a 13&#8243; wide press with   12 print stations, five of which are outfitted with moveable Stork   Rotaform screen units.</td>
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<p>That press has UV curing units on all stations,   and is equipped with hot and cold foil capability. The others are a 4150   10&#8243; press, with 10 print stations (four with screen heads); five 2200s,   two 10&#8243;, three 7&#8243;, a 910 and an 830, both 7&#8243; wide. For its finishing,   Star Label Products has Rotoflex and Arpeco equipment. The company   possesses an impressive collection of rotary dies from RotoMetrics. One   of its presses is in an isolated room, with a finishing machine in an   adjacent room. This is to accommodate pharmaceutical and other customers   who wish their products to be manufactured apart from others.</p>
<h4>Markets</h4>
<p>&#8220;Food is still a big part of our business,&#8221; Shev says. &#8220;From there we   entered the market for industrial type products. Lighting was a big   market for us in the beginning, but today we are doing very little in   that field. Over the years we started doing some generic pharmaceutical.   We also make labels for medical devices.</p>
<p>&#8220;Once we got into this building we started going after the cosmetics   market. I really like that business. The labels are very critical as far   as color and design. The customers are unbelievably meticulous – they   know exactly what they want,&#8221; says Shev. &#8220;Sometimes we will sit here all   day going back and forth with the color. I like the challenge of it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Food labels include a lot of packaging for meats. &#8220;The big thing right   now is organic, and we print a lot of nice multicolor work for those.   They want the package to pop.&#8221;</p>
<p>Along with food, Star Label has seen no slowdown in the cosmetics   market. &#8220;People always have to eat, and look good,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Cosmetics   always seem to sell. We are really concentrating our efforts in those   markets.&#8221;</p>
<p>The two combination presses produce the bulk of the cosmetics labels.   According to Shev, use of screen printing is growing, because of the   dramatic ink laydown. &#8220;This year we will add print units and accessories   onto our existing machinery, just to give us the flexibility to move   jobs around. We&#8217;ll probably be adding print stations to a couple of the   four color presses, and add a hot stamping unit to a press, which will   give us four presses that have hot stamping.&#8221;</p>
<h4>Turnaround</h4>
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<td align="left" valign="top">&#8220;Our niche is really our turnaround time,&#8221; says Shev. &#8220;We never say no.   We&#8217;ll do whatever we can do to get the job done for the customer. We had   a customer that did a lot of private label products, and they had a   very hard time keeping inventory control, because they never knew when   they were going to get an order, and when it came in, their customer   needed it in a couple of days. So we were always getting calls for rush   orders.</p>
<p>If we were in the middle of a long run and we got one of these   jobs, to accommodate the customer we would break down the job to get   their job on, and then set the other job back up after it was done. The   whole thing was very inefficient.</td>
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<p><div id="attachment_13" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 260px"><img class="size-full wp-image-13 " title="Star4" src="http://www.starlabel.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/Star4.jpg" alt="Robert Williams operates the Mark Andy LP3000 12-color press, which features five Stork Rotaform screen heads. " width="250" height="167" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Robert Williams operates the Mark Andy LP3000 12-color press, which features five Stork Rotaform screen heads. </p></div></td>
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<p>&#8220;My father came up with an idea. He said we&#8217;re going to buy a nice 12   color press. This customer&#8217;s work was mostly two colors, some three   colors. They would call us in the morning with an order for 250,000   labels – it was never a small quantity – that they needed by the   afternoon. Then three hours later they would call and say they also   needed 50,000 of another label. This was happening almost daily. So what   we ended up doing was set up three stations on the press, run the job,   don&#8217;t wash up, move to the next two stations, run the next job, and   maybe they will give us another job, so we&#8217;ll move to the next two   stations and run that job. At the end of the day we would wash   everything up at one time. The customer has his labels, and we were done   for the day. It worked out well.</p>
<p>&#8220;Now we have a different method,&#8221; he says. &#8220;We have extra machines. We   have two or three presses that we&#8217;ve had for a long time, they are paid   for and sit pretty much idle. Now instead of breaking down a job, I can   just stop a press and move that operator over to one of the machines   that are idle and get that job done, and then move him back to the first   job. So we don&#8217;t have to break down the whole job.&#8221;</p>
<h4>Sales</h4>
<p>About 45 percent of the label sales at Star Label Products are from   brokers and the trade. The rest is direct sales by Don, Shev and Irv   Magill, VP sales. Customer service is handled in-house, but there are no   outside sales people employed by the company. &#8220;Irv is also out there   networking with consultants who work in the markets that we serve,&#8221; Shev   notes. &#8220;He also networks with people selling labeling equipment, and he   supervises our inside customer service people. We do a lot of   advertising through the internet, and he qualifies the leads.&#8221;</p>
<p>The labor market for the Star Label team is not an issue. Shev says, &#8220;We   don&#8217;t have turnover. Some of the larger companies, which are located   nearby, have made layoffs when they lose a specific piece of business –   and these are the people with the most seniority. We have two great   press operators who came here when we first moved into this building.   Since we have been in business, we have never laid off one person due to   lack of work.&#8221;</p>
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<p><div id="attachment_11" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 260px"><img class="size-full wp-image-11" title="Star5" src="http://www.starlabel.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/Star5.jpg" alt="Press Operator Gary Thomas, left, and Plant Manager Metin Kural review a job at the Mark Andy 4150 press." width="250" height="167" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Press Operator Gary Thomas, left, and Plant Manager Metin Kural review a job at the Mark Andy 4150 press.</p></div></td>
<td valign="top">Shev Okumus will be at Labelexpo in Chicago this year, shopping for a   high end inspection system to install on the finishing equipment, and   has narrowed the field down to three vendors. Star Label also is looking   into RFID. &#8220;That&#8217;s the next thing we want to get involved in,&#8221; Shev   adds, &#8220;and we are investigating it now. We have customers who ask us   about it – not too frequently, but they are asking. So that&#8217;s probably   going to be a new opportunity for us.&#8221;</td>
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		<title>Star Label Products</title>
		<link>http://www.starlabel.com/blog/star-label-products/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 2010 14:25:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[The Keys to the Comfort Zone Star Label Products&#8217; purchase of a 12-station press helps it target small- to mid-sized customers who need combination, screen-printed primary labels. Originally written on October 2006 By Chris Mc Loone in the Package Printing &#8230; <a href="http://www.starlabel.com/blog/star-label-products/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-size: large;"><strong>The Keys to the Comfort Zone</strong></span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;"><strong>Star Label Products&#8217; purchase of a 12-station press helps it target  small- to mid-sized customers who need combination, screen-printed  primary labels.</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Originally written on October 2006 <a title="Search By Chris Mc Loone" href="http://www.packageprinting.com/search/?itc=p&amp;action=filter&amp;addFilter=byline:%22Chris+Mc+Loone%22#utm_source=packageprinting.com&amp;utm_medium=article_page&amp;utm_campaign=byline" target="_blank">By Chris Mc Loone</a> in the <a href="http://www.packageprinting.com/article/star-label-products-purchase-12-station-press-helps-target-small-mid-sized-customers-need-combination-screen-printed-primary-labels-38669/1" target="_blank">Package Printing</a> website</strong></p>
<p>Founded in 1972 by Don Okumus (currently the company&#8217;s vice  president),  Star Label Products occupies a 35,000-square-foot facility  with a  segregated printing/finishing department for the pharmaceutical   industry. The company manufactures pressure-sensitive labels including   product, multi-layer constructions, IRC coupons, bar code, UL, CSA,   thermal transfer. When Okumus founded the company, he did so with one   Mark Andy 800 Series press. Today, it operates 10 Mark Andy printing   presses and its capabilities include flexography, UV flexo, UV rotary   screen, hot foil stamping, cold foil stamping, and embossing. Star Label   prints labels for the cosmetic, health and beauty, pharmaceutical,   medical device, food &amp; beverage, electronics, and advertising   markets. The company is headed by Okumus&#8217;s son, Shev Okumus. The most   recent addition to its arsenal is a 12-color Mark Andy LP3000 press.</p>
<p>Star  Label decided to get into rotary screen printing and  combination  printing to fill a part of the market that needed this  capability. &#8220;At  the time, most of the converters doing multi-color  combination printing  were large companies targeting large beverage and  health and beauty  manufacturers,&#8221; says Shev Okumus. &#8220;We wanted to  produce combination  labels for the small- to mid-size customer who  needed a  combination-printed primary label but was too small for the  larger label  converter that was set up to do long runs for the major  companies. At  the same time, it would have been difficult to get  existing business  from larger companies that had multiple products.&#8221;  The up-front costs of  screens is also an issue, especially when  multiple copies are involved.  &#8220;Once a customer makes this investment  [in screens, hot stamping dies,  etc.], it is very difficult to get its  business unless it is having  serious problems with its current vendor,&#8221;  he adds.</p>
<p>Star Label went with the 12-color LP3000 for three reasons: requests   from the market to quote screen work that required five stations; one of   the company’s screen units was down for 10 days, rendering the company   unable to meet ship dates; and the company was getting enough work for   its existing combination press that it made sense to have a second   screen/combination press.</p>
<p>“We already did quite a bit of screen   work with our existing screen press that required using the four screen   units that were on the press,” says Okumus. “About two years ago, we had   one of the screen units go down and had a backlog of work that required   all four units. Between troubleshooting and getting the parts from   overseas, that station was down for 10 days. Our niche is turnaround,   and we were not able to meet ship dates on some of these orders.”</p>
<p>The   press Star Label added has 12 quick-change cassette stations and is the   company’s first 13˝ wide press. It has five Stork screen units that can   be placed in any of the 12 stations. “When we are not using the screen   units, the hot foil unit, or the cold foil unit, all 12 stations are UV   flexo stations,” Okumus says. The company is running quite a bit for   beverage, cosmetic, and health and beauty markets using the five-station   press.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Emerging trends</span></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong>Keeping up with   emerging trends and new developments in any industry is important.   Sometimes more important is educating your own customers about these   emerging trends. “We have been seeing quite a bit of specialty coatings   being applied by screen,” says Okumus. “For example, glow in the dark   coatings, heavy varnishes that are tactile and mimic embossing, and some   Braille printing.” He adds, “We have already been involved in some of   these trends. In addition, we are making our current and potential   customers aware of what can be accomplished with rotary screen printing   and combination printing.”</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Ensuring customer confidence</span></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong>The   benefits of combination presses are well known, but how do these   benefits translate into improved business? For Star Label, keeping   customers in the comfort zone by having a second press to complete a job   goes a long way. “It has provided our existing customers with a comfort   level knowing that we have a second piece of equipment that their   screen-printed or combination-printed labels can be produced on,” says   Okumus. The addition of a fifth station also gives Star Label a   competitive edge. According to Okumus, companies the size of Star Label   do not usually offer the fifth station.</p>
<p>In the end, however,   it’s all about service. “We are now able to offer our customers the   service level that they are used to getting from us, knowing that if we   have a long run, even if it is a two-week run, we can still turn the   shorter runs around to meet their delivery requirements,” adds Okumus.   pP</p>
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