The AI Urgency Conversation Is Right — But Print Has a Different Problem to Solve
The following post was originally published by Printing Impressions. To read more of their content, subscribe to their newsletter, Today on PIWorld.
There’s a conversation happening at the executive level right now that I think is exactly right in its urgency and exactly incomplete for our industry.
The framing goes something like this: AI fluency is no longer optional. The companies winning right now have made AI instinctive — not a tool employees use sometimes, but a reflex. Something leaders in this space are calling “AI DNA.” And the organizations that haven’t gotten there are falling behind fast, sometimes catastrophically.
That urgency is real. I believe it completely.
But when I hear that conversation in the context of the printing and packaging industry, I find myself thinking about a different problem. Not the people who won’t adopt AI, but that the people who have been doing their jobs brilliantly for 25 years are about to retire.
Because when they go, they take everything with them.
This Isn’t Just a Print Shop Problem
The knowledge crisis I’m describing doesn’t stop at the pressroom door. It runs the entire length of the print and packaging value chain.
At the OEM level, it’s the senior field service engineer who knows exactly how a specific press behaves in high-humidity environments — knowledge that no service manual captures. The application specialist who has spent two decades helping customers push equipment to its limits and knows which configurations actually work in production versus which ones only work in demos.
At the supplier and distributor level, it’s the rep who has 30 years of substrate knowledge in her head: which papers run beautifully on which heads, which coatings cause problems at speed, which substitutes actually hold up when a primary goes on backorder. The account manager who knows the buying patterns, the real decision-makers, and the unwritten rules of every major account relationship.
At the print and packaging operation level, it’s the senior estimator who knows which clients always underestimate quantities and which jobs have hidden complexity baked into the spec. The lead press operator who can diagnose a registration problem by sound before it ever shows up in quality inspection. The color specialist who knows when to trust the ICC profile and when to override it. The scheduler who has internalized years of capacity exception logic and customer prioritization judgment that has never been written down anywhere.
Across every one of these entities, the pattern is the same: The knowledge that creates competitive advantage lives in people, not systems. And those people are aging out.
The Scale of What’s at Risk
The average age of a skilled technical professional in the printing and packaging industry is climbing. The cost of losing one high-tenure person — across recruiting, ramp-up time, productivity loss, and the errors a less experienced person makes while learning — routinely runs one to two times their annual salary. And that’s before you account for the client relationships, the institutional memory, and the operational instincts that simply cannot be transferred in an offboarding meeting.
Roughly 80% of the critical knowledge in a typical print operation has never been formally documented. Not because people were careless. Because it was never the kind of knowledge that fit in a manual. It’s judgment. It’s pattern recognition. It’s the diagnostic sequence that saves two hours because someone learned it the hard way, years ago.
That knowledge took decades to build. And right now, across this industry — at the OEM, at the supplier, at the distributor, on the shop floor — it is walking out the door.
A Different Kind of AI Problem
The broader AI adoption conversation focuses on getting people to use AI — building the habit, the fluency, the instinct. That’s a culture and change management problem, and it’s a legitimate one.
Our industry has that problem, too. But layered underneath it is something more urgent and far less discussed: What happens to the knowledge those people carry when they leave?
This is the problem I call knowledge sovereignty. And it is the one the print and packaging industry has the narrowest window to solve.
Knowledge sovereignty is the state in which your organization’s most critical institutional knowledge is owned, preserved, and deployed internally — as AI that works alongside your human team, trained on your people, running in your systems, permanently.
Not vendor-dependent. Not platform-dependent. Not person-dependent.
An AI employee is not a chatbot that answers generic questions. It’s not a document repository dressed up with a chat interface. It’s a role-specific AI trained on a specific person’s actual knowledge — their decision frameworks, their exception logic, their pattern recognition — and assigned to every human in that operational role. Available every shift. Every location. Regardless of who you can hire.
When your best field service engineer retires, the AI employee he helped build carries his diagnostic judgment forward. When a new sales rep joins your distribution team, they have immediate access to 30 years of account and substrate knowledge. When the labor market tightens — and it will — your operation runs at full capability regardless.
That is not a technology product. That is a structural advantage.
The Window Is Open Now
Here’s what I tell every organization I work with across this industry: The knowledge capture window is open right now, and it will not stay open.
Before the retirement announcement, you have access to the person, their full cooperation, and the time to do this right. Knowledge capture can be conversational and thorough, designed to surface what has never been written down, because no one thought to ask.
After the announcement, you have weeks, not months. Capture is rushed. The person is already mentally checked out. This is where most organizations find themselves: scrambling through someone’s last two weeks.
After they leave, the window is closed. Whatever wasn’t captured is gone. You are now paying to reconstruct it through trial, error, and expensive mistakes. And that reconstruction never quite gets there, because the person who would have told you what you were missing is no longer there to tell you.
The DNA Worth Preserving
The conversation about AI fluency as instinct — as something woven into how an organization operates — is the right conversation. In print and packaging, I’d push it one step further.
AI DNA in our industry has to mean that your organization’s institutional intelligence is captured before it retires, codified before it’s lost, and deployed as AI that works every shift and gets smarter over time. It has to mean that the knowledge advantage you’ve built over decades doesn’t disappear when the people who built it walk out the door.
The question isn’t whether you can afford to do this. It’s whether you can afford not to.
That knowledge took decades to build. The work of preserving it starts with one person. One role. One organization.
Start Here
If this landed for you, there's probably someone in your organization you were thinking about while you read it. Someone whose departure would leave a hole that no job posting fills.
We start by finding out exactly where that risk lives. PRINTING AI's Knowledge Audit identifies who holds your highest-risk knowledge, what it would cost you to lose them, and what it would take to capture it before the window closes.
No form. No funnel. Just reach out.
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Amy Servi-Bonner is the Vice President, Printing AI. With over 25 years of experience in technology leadership and consulting, Servi-Bonner brings deep expertise in ERP systems, digital transformation, and AI strategy. She holds an Executive Degree in AI Strategy and Governance from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, as well as an MBA in Finance from Webster University. Her combination of technical acumen, consulting background, and knowledge of the printing and packaging sector uniquely positions her to guide companies through the next era of transformation.







