Marian Wascher

Bank in-plants face big changes as banks continue to merge and expand. With bank mergers on the rise, and online banking changing the way people deal with their banks, the in-plants that serve these institutions are undergoing alterations of their own. Print volume is increasing and work is migrating from forms to marketing pieces. Digital job delivery is becoming more common, as is on-demand printing. In Memphis, Tenn., Mike Sprayberry, print shop manager for First Tennessee Bank, is about to add a Xerox DocuTech 6135 so he can store jobs digitally and reduce the amount of work that is warehoused. "We've got several

Marian Wascher was headed for a career in business. Then printing caught her fancy. Her shop is now an in-plant model. Unlike many in-plant managers, Marian Wascher did not fall in love with printing at an early age. In fact, when she was growing up in West Point, Nebraska, printing may well have been the furthest thing from her mind. A self-described "organizer," she studied business administration and accounting, without taking even one printing class. In the end, though, this has not mattered one bit. After seven years as manager of First Printing, the in-plant for First National Bank of Omaha, Wascher has earned

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