Tips For Printing Labels
by Allen L. Wyatt
Sometimes it's the mundane things in business that
drive you crazy. Things like trying to print out labels for a mailing without
the labels getting stuck in your printer or the printing running off the labels.
Here are several tips to help:
Use Good Quality Labels If you print labels in your printer, make sure you purchase
labels that are a good quality. If you have a dot matrix printer, low quality or
marginal labels may peel off as the label stock moves around the platten. If
this happens, you could end up with labels stuck inside your printer where it is
difficult to remove them. If you have a laser printer, make sure the labels you
use are designed for the high heat generated by a laser printer. If not, the
adhesive on the back of the labels may soften to a point where the labels come
off in the printer, or the adhesive oozes out and messes up your printer. Good
quality labels should be available from any business supply store, and are worth
the few extra pennies you have to pay.
Saving Money on Printing Labels
If you have purchased labels for your laser printer, you
already know that they can be a bit expensive. It can be frustrating to print
your labels and not have them lined up just right. Each bad sheet you print is
effectively money down the drain.
To overcome this problem, make sure you print a test sheet
before you actually print on the labels themselves. Simply put a blank sheet of
paper in the manual feed of your laser printer, instead of your label sheet.
When the information is printed on the blank sheet, place that sheet behind a
blank sheet of labels and hold it up to the light. The print on the paper will
show through the label sheet, and you can see how the text lines up.
The benefit of this is that you save money—the blank paper
is much cheaper than the label sheets. Continue printing your test sheets,
adjusting the print parameters as necessary in Word. When you are satisfied with
how your test sheet prints, go ahead and print on the labels themselves.
Making Use of Extra Labels
A common use of Word is to print labels on different types
of label stock. It is possible, however, to have “extra” labels left over at the
end of a print run. For instance, suppose you run a mail merge for labels to 97
clients, and each sheet of labels has 30 labels on it. This means you will need
four sheets of labels, and you would waste 23 labels on the last sheet.
To save those labels, don’t merge directly to your printer.
Merge to a new document instead. Then, scroll down to the last name in the
merged document. Notice the blank cells in the table—these are the blank labels
in your print run.
Position the insertion point in one of the blank cells and
type your name and return address. You can then copy and paste the return
address into all the other blank cells. Now when you print your label sheets you
can keep the return-address labels at the end of the print job and use them when
you pay your bills. This certainly is a penny-pinching alternative to wasting
the last labels on the last sheet.
© 2004 Allen Wyatt
Allen Wyatt, an internationally recognized expert in small
computer systems, has been working in the computer and publishing industries for
over two decades. He has written more than fifty books explaining many different
facets of working with computers, as well as numerous magazine articles. His
books have covered topics ranging from programming languages to using
application software to using operating systems. Through the written word, Allen
has helped millions of readers learn how to better use computers.
Allen is the president of Discovery Computing Inc., a
computer- and publishing-services company located in Mesa, Arizona. He publishes
free weekly newsletters about how to better use programs such as Microsoft Word
and Excel. You can find more information on the newsletters at
www.VitalNews.com.
|