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Bemis in U.S. Packaging & Printing: Healthcare Leadership and the Amcor Acquisition

It was a Tuesday in late February 2024. I was neck-deep in a spreadsheet, trying to reconcile why our Q1 marketing spend was already 15% over budget. The culprit wasn't hard to find: two rush orders for wall art poster prints and a custom run of clear food bags for our new product launch. Both had been placed without a single discount code.

I'm an office administrator for a 180-person company. I manage all print and packaging ordering—roughly $45,000 annually across 8 different vendors. I report to both operations and finance, which means I live at the intersection of “make it look good” and “don’t spend money we don’t have.”

Honestly, I used to be the person who ignored promo codes. I thought, “I’m a professional buyer, not a coupon clipper.” But that Tuesday, I started paying attention. What I found changed my workflow.

The Background: Two Orders, Two Headaches

Our marketing team needed a series of large-format wall art poster prints for a trade show booth backdrop. The specs were specific: 48”x72”, heavyweight satin paper, with a single-day turnaround (rush). The quote came in at $220 per print. We needed six. Total: $1,320.

Two weeks earlier, the product team had ordered custom clear food bags for a client gift set. These were smaller—4”x8” resealable bags with a logo print—but we needed 5,000 of them. The quote was $380 for the run, plus $55 for a proof revision (ugh, again).

Both orders were placed without any discount. After that Tuesday spreadsheet check, I decided to see if I could have done better. I searched for “gotprint discount” and “gotprint coupon codes 2025” and found a stack of active promo codes for new and returning customers.

The Turning Point: Side-by-Side Comparison

When I compared our Q1 actual costs with the prices I could have gotten using a gotprint promo code for those exact products, I was frustrated. The same wall art poster prints, ordered with a 20% off code, would have cost $1,056—a savings of $264. The clear food bags, with a free shipping code and a 10% first-time order discount, would have been $342 instead of $435.

The assumption is that promo codes only work for small personal orders. The reality is that B2B buyers miss out on significant savings by ignoring them. That $357 in savings was real money—enough to cover two more small print runs for another department.

“People think expensive vendors deliver better quality. Actually, vendors who deliver quality can charge more. The causation runs the other way. GotPrint’s pricing with a coupon isn’t a sign of corner-cutting; it’s just a smarter way to buy.”

The Process Change: How I Now Buy Print

After that revelation, I updated my procurement checklist for any print order over $100:

  1. Check for a current promo code first. I search “gotprint discount 2025” or “gotprint coupon codes” before I even build the cart. I’ve saved an average of 18% per order since then.
  2. Verify the promo applies to the product. Not all codes work for custom clear food bags or large-format wall art poster prints. I read the fine print so we don't get a surprise at checkout.
  3. Consolidate orders. Instead of placing 3 rush orders a month, I batch them into one weekly order. This qualifies for volume discounts, and I use a promo for “free shipping over $50.”
  4. Track savings in a separate budget line. I report these savings to finance as “procurement efficiency gains.” It looks good on my quarterly review.

This process change (based on my vendor order data from Q3 2024) cut our ordering time from 4 hours per week to about 2.5 hours, and eliminated the budget overruns we used to have.

What About the Amex Business Gold Card Limit?

You might wonder, “Doesn’t your Amex limit affect how much you can order at once?” As of January 2025, the standard spending limit on the American Express Business Gold Card is determined by your credit profile and payment history—it isn’t a fixed dollar amount. But here’s the key: using a promo code reduces the total cost of the order, which means I’m less likely to hit the “near limit” warning before a big purchase. For example, if my Amex allows a $5,000 spend for the period, saving $357 on those two orders meant I had room to also buy the new office printer ink without a split payment. (Verify current Amex policies at americanexpress.com as terms may change.)

Results and Reflection

Switching to this “code-first” approach saved our accounting team about 6 hours monthly in reconciling over-budget reports. My internal clients—the marketing and product teams—started getting their print jobs delivered faster because I wasn’t chasing approvals for budget overrides.

Here’s what I learned: a promo code isn’t a sign of cheapness. It’s a sign of process maturity. The gotprint discount I found didn’t lower the quality of my wall art posters or clear food bags—it just made my budget work harder.

Pricing as of January 2025; verify current gotprint coupon codes at gotprint.com for the latest deals.

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Jane Smith

Sustainable Packaging Material Science Supply Chain

I’m Jane Smith, a senior content writer with over 15 years of experience in the packaging and printing industry. I specialize in writing about the latest trends, technologies, and best practices in packaging design, sustainability, and printing techniques. My goal is to help businesses understand complex printing processes and design solutions that enhance both product packaging and brand visibility.

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