The folding carton market is entering one of its most dynamic periods in decades, and for converters who move at the right moment, that represents a significant commercial opportunity.
Digital printing is at the centre of that change. With no plates, no makeready waste, and job changeovers measured in minutes rather than hours, it offers a fundamentally different production model; one that’s increasingly aligned with how brand owners want to specify and order packaging today. SpeedSet Orca is an example of this principle, running at 11,000 B1 sheets per hour to bring industrial-scale capability to work that was previously unprofitable to produce.
More SKUs, shorter runs, offset margins collapse
The folding carton work coming through production facilities today looks nothing like it did five years ago. Brand owners are proliferating SKUs at pace, with a noticeable rise in limited editions, regional variants, promotional packaging, and regulatory-driven changes. The pharmaceutical sector demands serialisation and track-and-trace, while premium food and beverage brands want personalisation and seasonal launches that turn around in weeks, not months.
This isn’t a fleeting trend, it’s industry-wide change driven by retail dynamics that aren’t reversing. The result is that average run lengths are dropping. Converters are quoting more jobs for fewer sheets. And most importantly in a cost-sensitive market, every plate change, makeready hour, and sheet wasted in offset setup erodes margin on work that’s increasingly unprofitable to produce conventionally.
Digital doesn’t just solve this problem; it inverts the economics. No plates or makeready waste. Job changeovers in minutes, not hours. Agfa’s SpeedSet Orca runs at 11,000 B1 sheets per hour. That’s not a niche anymore, but a significant and growing portion of the work converters handle daily. Plus, since converters can produce exactly what’s needed, whenever it’s needed, there are no minimum order quantities (MOQs) forcing customers to over-order or hold excess stock that risks becoming obsolete. Digital production eliminates the write-offs that can come with spec changes, rebrands, or discontinued SKUs sitting in warehouses.
Offset-quality output, broader substrates, real scale
The SpeedSet Orca delivers 1200 dpi resolution with a colour gamut that meets industry standards for brand consistency. Converters aren’t being asked to compromise on quality or ask their customers to accept ‘good enough for digital,’ the technology delivers offset-equivalent output.
The name isn’t accidental. Like its oceanic namesake, the SpeedSet Orca combines intelligence, agility, and dominance in its environment. It’s the apex predator in digital folding carton printing – a press that doesn’t just compete with conventional processes but redefines what converters can expect from production equipment.
The substrate range matters here too. The SpeedSet Orca handles everything from 0.2mm paper to 2mm microflute, making it suitable for folding carton, shelf-ready packaging, and micro-corrugated jobs. Far from being a specialist machine for occasional short runs, it’s a production press that fits into demanding, mixed-work environments.
The automation advantage is real
Where digital moves from viable to superior is in operational simplicity. Offset presses require skilled operators who can manage colour calibration, register, and makeready. Those operators are increasingly difficult to find and expensive to retain. Digital presses reduce that dependency dramatically because the learning curve is shorter, and the setup is faster. The consistency is built into the technology rather than reliant on individual expertise.
For converters operating in tight labour markets, which is most of them, this is a major benefit that lets operations maintain productivity with leaner teams and less operational risk.
The SpeedSet Orca also integrates with Agfa’s Asanti workflow software, which automates job planning, colour management, and production scheduling. This isn’t just about the press; it’s about the entire production ecosystem working intelligently to maximise uptime and minimise touchpoints.
Asanti 8’s StackFlow takes this functionality even further by addressing the complexity of multi-location retail fulfilment. Using content lists – pre-collated sequences based on order data – it enables the SpeedSet Orca to print folding carton blanks in the precise order they need to be packed and shipped. Instead of printing in bulk to be manually sorted by destination, converters can produce pre-collated stacks with interleave sheets separating each location’s order. The downstream benefits include faster fulfilment, fewer errors, and scalability that manual sorting struggles to match.
Quote more jobs, faster turns, profitable short runs
Something important shifts when a folding carton converter adds digital capacity: the commercial conversation changes.
Suddenly, jobs that were previously unquotable become viable. Rush orders with 48-hour turnarounds, test marketing runs of 500 units, and seasonal packaging that needs three versions. These aren’t theoretical use-cases anymore, they’re exactly the kind of work brand owners need.
The SpeedSet Orca doesn’t just handle this work technically; it makes it commercially attractive. No minimum run economics dictated by plate costs, no makeready time padding the quote, and no material waste inflating the price per unit.
Converters with hybrid capabilities, offset for volume and digital for agility, can say yes to a broader range of work. That versatility translates directly into stronger customer relationships and revenue from jobs that would otherwise go elsewhere or not happen at all.
Hybrid wins: digital share rises, offset stays
Digital won’t outright replace offset for long-run folding carton work because that’s not the point. The point is that an increasing share of the work converters need to win, and produce profitably, suits digital better than conventional processes.
We’ve seen this pattern before in other segments. The converters who invested in digital capabilities early didn’t abandon offset; they built hybrid operations that could profitably handle the full spectrum of work. They became more versatile, more responsive, and more valuable to their customers.
That’s what the SpeedSet Orca enables for folding carton. Not a replacement for what’s being done today, but the capability to dominate the work that’s coming tomorrow.
The market’s moving. The question is whether converters are moving with it.
Attributed to Richard Cotterill, Head of Sales – Packaging | Digital Printing Solutions at Agfa.
