How to Create a Business Brochure That Actually Gets Read (Not Tossed)

How to Create a Business Brochure That Actually Gets Read (Not Tossed)

If you're the person in the office who gets handed the "we need a new brochure" project, this is for you. I manage all our office supplies and marketing material ordering—about $15,000 annually across 8 vendors. The brochure request usually lands on my desk with a vague directive and a tight budget. After 5 years of managing these projects, I've learned it's less about design genius and more about a solid, repeatable process. This checklist is what I wish I had when I took over purchasing in 2020.

It's a 7-step process. Follow it, and you'll get a professional-looking piece without the last-minute panic or budget surprises.

Step 1: Lock Down the "Why" Before You Think About Design

Everyone jumps straight to colors and fonts. Don't. The most frustrating part of brochure projects: stakeholders changing their minds halfway through. You'd think a simple "what's this for?" would be clear from the start, but interpretation varies wildly.

Action: Get answers to these three questions in writing (an email is fine):

  • Primary Goal: Is this for a trade show handout, a direct mail piece, or a leave-behind for sales reps? The goal dictates everything—size, paper weight, quantity.
  • Target Reader: Who exactly are we trying to reach? "Potential customers" is too vague. Is it facility managers for commercial properties? Office managers at mid-sized firms? Be specific.
  • Desired Action: What do we want the reader to DO? Visit a website? Call a sales number? Scan a QR code for a catalog? The call-to-action (CTA) must be crystal clear.

I only believed this step was crucial after skipping it once. We designed a beautiful, detailed brochure for a trade show, only to realize on-site that people just wanted a quick-reference spec sheet. That "cheap" quick-print job ended up costing us more in wasted time and reprints.

Step 2: Choose the Right Size & Format (This Affects Cost More Than You Think)

This isn't just about what looks good. It's about postal regulations and printer economics. A non-standard size can double your printing costs.

Action: Pick from these three standard, cost-effective options:

  • Standard Tri-Fold (8.5" x 11" sheet, folded twice): The workhorse. Fits in a #10 envelope, perfect for mailings. Everyone knows how to open it. This is your default choice.
  • Half-Fold (8.5" x 11" sheet, folded once): Gives you four panels (front/back, inside left/right). Feels a bit more substantial than a tri-fold. Good for when you have slightly more content.
  • 8.5" x 14" (Legal size) Tri-Fold: A bit more room to breathe. Stands out in a pile of standard brochures. Just remember: it needs an 9" x 12" envelope for mailing.

According to USPS Business Mail 101, a standard tri-fold mailed as a letter (under 1 oz) costs $0.73 for postage. That same brochure, if it's a quarter-inch too thick or uses a stiff paper, gets classified as a "flat" and jumps to $1.50. Design with postage in mind.

Step 3: Gather ALL Content Brutally Early

Content delays are the #1 cause of missed deadlines. "We're still waiting on the new product photo" or "legal hasn't approved the copy yet" will derail you.

Action: Create a shared folder and demand these assets by a hard deadline:

  • Final Text: All copy, proofread and approved. No "placeholder lorem ipsum."
  • High-Resolution Logos & Images: 300 DPI minimum. Get the vector files (.ai, .eps) for logos, not just a .jpg from the website.
  • Brand Guidelines: The official document with correct color codes (Pantone, CMYK, HEX), approved fonts, and logo usage rules.
  • Contact Information: Phone, website, address, social media handles. Triple-check accuracy. You'd be surprised how often this is wrong.

There's something satisfying about having all the assets ready before the designer even starts. After all the stress of chasing people down, finally having control over the timeline—that's the payoff.

Step 4: Get Print Quotes the Smart Way

You can't get an accurate quote with "we need some brochures." Printers need specs. Providing incomplete specs is how you get a "cheap" quote that balloons with add-on fees.

Action: Send this checklist to at least 3 printers (one online, one local):

  • Quantity: 500, 1000, 2500? (Pro tip: The per-unit cost drops significantly between 500 and 1000, then less so after that).
  • Size & Format: From Step 2 (e.g., "8.5x11 tri-fold").
  • Paper Stock: "100lb Gloss Text for inside, 12pt Gloss Cover for outside" is a safe, professional choice.
  • Ink/Color: "Full color, both sides."
  • Finishing: Folding. Any special coatings? Aqueous coating protects against fingerprints and is worth the small upcharge.
  • Turnaround: Standard (7-10 business days) vs. Rush. Rush fees are brutal—often +50-100%.
"According to publicly listed prices from major online printers in January 2025, for 1,000 tri-fold brochures (8.5x11, 100lb gloss text, full color, standard turnaround), you should expect quotes in the $250-$400 range, excluding shipping. Always confirm if setup/plate fees are included."

Step 5: Build in a Proofing Buffer (The Step Everyone Ignores)

You will find errors. Everyone will have "one tiny change." If your timeline is "design, then print," you're setting yourself up for failure.

Action: Mandate this sequence:

  1. Digital Proof: Review the PDF on screen. Check spelling, dates, numbers, phone numbers, URLs. Have at least two other people do the same.
  2. Physical Proof (if budget allows): For a large or important print run, pay the $50-$100 for a single physical copy to be printed and shipped. Colors look different on paper than on a screen. Feel the paper weight.
  3. Approval Sign-Off: Get final approval via email from the decision-maker. This is your "CYA" document if someone complains later.

After the third time we found a typo only after printing 2,000 copies, I was ready to give up. What finally helped was building this proofing cycle into the project plan as non-negotiable phases.

Step 6: Plan the Distribution From the Start

A brochure in a box in the supply closet is a waste of money. How will it get into people's hands? This isn't an afterthought; it influences quantity and even design.

Action: Decide on your primary distribution channel:

  • Direct Mail: You'll need a mailing list, envelopes, and postage. Factor in the cost of a #10 envelope and a First-Class stamp ($0.73 as of Jan 2025). Work with a mail house if over 200 pieces.
  • Trade Shows: Order a smaller quantity (500-1000) but on sturdier paper (14pt cover) to survive being carried around.
  • In-Office/Sales Rep Use: A standard run on good paper is fine. Make sure the CTA is relevant ("Call your local rep" vs. "Visit our website").

Step 7: Archive Everything for Next Time

The project isn't done when the boxes arrive. The vendor who couldn't provide the native design files when we needed a minor text update two years later cost us $800 in redesign fees.

Action: Create a "Brochure Project - [Project Name]" folder and save:

  • Final print-ready PDFs.
  • Native design files (from the designer).
  • Print quote and invoice.
  • Brand guidelines used.
  • A brief post-mortem note: "Ordered 1,000 from Vendor X. Good quality, took 8 days. Use 14pt cover next time for trade shows."

This takes 10 minutes. When someone asks, "Can we update that brochure from 2023?" you'll be a hero instead of starting from scratch.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Forgetting Bleed: If your design has color or images that go to the edge, you need a "bleed" (usually 0.125"). Tell your designer. Printers will reject files without it.
  • Using Low-Res Images: They look fine on your monitor but will print pixelated and blurry. 300 DPI minimum.
  • Ignoring Turnaround Time: Standard doesn't mean 3 days. It usually means 7-10 business days. Plan backward from your event or mailing date.
  • Not Ordering Extras: Always order 5-10% more than you think you need. Running out is more expensive than the cost of a few extra brochures.

This process might seem detailed, but an informed coordinator saves the company money and headaches. I'd rather spend an hour upfront on this checklist than deal with the fallout of a rushed, expensive, or ineffective brochure. Now you have the framework—go make something people will keep, not recycle.