A commercial wall printer for a company you already run
Add a Wall-Printing Service Line to Your Business
Already running an advertising, fit-out or décor company? A commercial wall printer lets you add wall printing as a service line on the work you already win — a new revenue item your existing team runs, straight from the factory. This isn't a business you start from scratch; it's a capability you bolt onto the company you already have. Factory-direct, single unit to a multi-site rollout.
Not adding to an existing company? Two other tracks fit better: if you're an individual starting from scratch, head to the Business Opportunity page; if you want to resell, private-label or distribute the machines, that's the Distributor Program.
The services you already sell — plus one more line
PrintingAdvertisingFit-OutDécorWall Printing
A new service lineWall printing added to the work your company already sells
Your team runs itTrained on the machine and workflow — no print background needed
Factory-directStraight from the line that builds it — single unit, no full-container minimum
12-monthParts warranty + spare parts stocked ≥ 5 years
Bolt wall printing onto the business you already run
How Companies Add Wall Printing as a Service Line
Wall printing slots into a company you already run as one more thing you can sell — a new service line and a new revenue item on work you already win, not a business you build from zero. Here's how three kinds of company plug it in. (What a wall printer can actually print — surfaces, materials, finished examples — is covered on the Applications page; this section is about what the line adds to your business.)
How you do it now
Bought in, farmed out, waited on
Subcontract the print step to an outside supplier.
Buy the capability in on each project, or apply vinyl by hand.
Wait on a subcontractor's queue and schedule.
Watch the margin on the print step leave the building.
With the line added
In-house, on your own machine
Print the work in-house on your own machine instead of farming it out.
Add wall printing as a line item on jobs you already win.
Keep the work and the schedule under one roof.
Build a repeatable new revenue item into the company.
Advertising
Wall Printer for an Advertising Company — Print In-House Instead of Subcontracting
For: ad shops, sign makers and branding agencies who already win branded-wall, signage and promotional work — and currently subcontract the print step or apply vinyl by hand.
Bring the print step in-house — the branded-wall and signage work you already quote gets printed on your own machine instead of farmed out.
Add wall printing as a line item on jobs you're already selling, so the same client relationship carries a new billable service.
Keep the schedule and the work under one roof instead of waiting on a subcontractor's queue.
Fit-Out & Renovation
Wall Printer for an Interior Decoration Business — A New Line on Every Project
For: fit-out contractors, renovation firms and decoration businesses already delivering interiors — offices, retail, hospitality — who want one more service to attach to each project.
Add printed feature walls and graphics as a service line on the fit-out and renovation projects you already run, without subcontracting it out.
Turn a capability you'd otherwise buy in into an in-house line item on work you already win.
Offer existing clients a finished, custom wall as part of the project scope — a reason to expand the contract, not just fulfil it.
For: décor studios, soft-furnishing and interior-design businesses already serving clients on style and finishes, who want to add a custom-wall service they can deliver themselves.
Add an on-site custom-wall service to the décor work you already sell — a printed feature wall becomes something you deliver, not outsource.
Give existing clients one more finish to choose, printed to their brief, as part of the service you already provide.
Build a repeatable new revenue item into the business rather than a one-off upsell.
Found how it fits your business? Here's how you run it across the company. ↓
Training, multi-unit deployment and company procurement
How Companies Deploy and Buy the Service Line
Adding the line to a company — not a solo operator — raises three practical questions: can our team run it, how do we deploy across sites, and how do we buy as a company? Straight answers, one each.
Can our team run it?
Training — Your Current Team, No Print Background Needed
Your existing staff learn the machine two ways: a video library they can work through at their own pace, and a live onboarding session with an engineer to get your first real print out. It's built for people with no print background, so the team you already have runs the line — you're not hiring a print specialist to add the service.
How do we deploy across sites?
Multi-Unit Deployment — One Machine or a Rollout Across Sites
Running one branch or many? The line scales with the company. Multi-site or multi-unit deployment runs through the multi-unit / wholesale channel — you place across your locations at partner terms, factory-direct. Minimums and terms are settled on your application, sized to your rollout, not fixed on this page.
How do we buy as a company?
Company Procurement — Terms, Invoicing and Volume
Buying as a business, not an individual: terms, invoicing and volume are handled through an approved application and a quote. Tell us your company, your deployment and how you buy, and we shape the terms around it. Pricing and formal terms come back on your quote — we don't post them on the page.
Every service line runs on the same factory-direct chain behind the machine. ↓
120–180 units a month since 2018, shipping to 47 countries
The support chain behind a service line you build into your business exists because the volume does — factory-direct, not a reseller passing you along.
Whichever way your company runs the line, you're on the factory's own chain — the support that keeps a service line you've built into your business earning instead of stranded. In specifics, not slogans:
Spare parts stocked ≥ 5 years
Core parts kept in-house for at least 5 years, plus in-house stock ready to ship — so the line you add keeps running, not idle waiting on a part.
12-month parts warranty
A defined 12-month parts warranty — a real window we stand behind, not a "lifetime" claim no factory can honor.
7-day transit damage cover
Transit damage reported within 7 days of delivery is covered — the freight-leg risk isn't your company's to absorb.
Factory-direct & in-house stock
You buy straight from the line that builds and stocks the machines — single unit or a multi-site rollout, no full-container minimum to start.
Behind it: a factory building 120–180 units a month since 2018, shipping to 47 countries — the support chain exists because the volume does.
Cleared for the markets your company sells into
Four certifications clear the equipment for your markets: CE · FCC · RoHS · ISO 9001. All four are third-party validated. Certificate copies are released during the quote step under NDA rather than published on the page — the reason you won't see certificate numbers printed here.
CEFCCRoHSISO 9001
Ready to add the line? Tell us about your company. ↓
One last check before you send it
Adding to a Company, Starting Solo, or Reselling?
Before you send an inquiry, make sure you're on the right page:
Adding a service line to a company you already run
Advertising, fit-out or décor? You're in the right place — request a quote below.