Print Tech can help free you from the tyranny of "one message fits all" marketing.
Our Graphic Design team can create brochures, postcards, and flyers that incorporate our revolutionary Variable Data Technology to personalize your message with text, graphics and photos. Our Print-On-Demand Department will print only what you need, saving time, money and natural resources. Finally, our In-House Mailing Department will deliver those pieces to the right people, achieving response rates up to 20%.
If you want to create some marketing fireworks, call Print Tech TODAY at 1-800-422-5527 or visit us at www.print-tech.com to get the best bang for your buck!

When John Adams and Thomas Jefferson met at the 1775 Continental Congress, they began a close and sometimes troubled friendship that lasted for more than 50 years. These two founding fathers, possessing different political philosophies, were most responsible for the Declaration of Independence and later served as diplomats, Vice Presidents and as Presidents of the United States.
After George Washington decided not to run for a third presidential term in 1796, Vice President Adams ran and won a narrow electoral victory over his old friend, Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson. Four years later, Jefferson defeated the Adams re-election bid to become the third President of the United States.
That began a long rocky spell between the two men. On his way out, President Adams appointed some of Jefferson's "most ardent political enemies" to positions that would "work against his executive authority." Over the next twelve years they stopped writing to one another. Then in 1811, after two years of trying, Dr. Benjamin Rush, a friend of both and also a signer of the Declaration of Independence, succeeded in getting the two to start corresponding again.
The correspondence continued until July 4, 1826. On that day, John Adams toasted "Independence Forever!" and in the late afternoon, he uttered his last words, "Thomas Jefferson survives." Unknown to him, Jefferson had passed away several hours earlier.
Adams and Jefferson were separated by distance, culture and philosophy. They may not have been able to explain themselves to each other, but together they were able to define liberty, freedom and a new nation to the world.
|