Online print at a turning point: OPS 2026 brings visionaries to the stage to discuss disruption
- Admin
- 40 minutes ago
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Print Solutions
The Online Print Summit 2026 continues to expand its speaker line up and places the topic of disruption even more firmly at the centre of the conversation. Newly confirmed speakers include Ruppert Bodmeier, founder of the AI platform ‘Disrooptive’, Philipp Mühlbauer, founder and CEO of online print heavyweight The Customization Group, French online print expert Ludovic Martin, and Print Logistics CEO Michał Tracz. Their presentations focus on the key question of how (online) print is currently being fundamentally transformed and which strategic options companies have to actively shape this development. Anyone looking for answers should make sure to be there on 12 and 13 March at the Alte Kongresshalle in Munich, Germany.
‘We are at a point where online print is not simply being optimized, but in many areas needs to be rethought. That is why the Online Print Summit 2026 is bringing people to the stage who provide exactly that impulse: how we can use artificial intelligence, print and mass customisation in such a way that we are not disrupted by others, but instead succeed in further developing our business models ourselves,’ said Bernd Zipper, founder of zipcon consulting and co-organiser of OPS. ‘What this requires is quite a challenge for traditional companies: absolute self-reflection, absolute openness, and the right strategy for working with AI.’
Who is disrupting whom? And what does AI have to do with an orchestra?
That is exactly what the keynote by Ruppert Bodmeier is built around, the founder of the AI platform Disrooptive.com. For years, he has been exploring how companies can truly master digital innovation and AI, rather than only testing individual applications. In his keynote at the Online Print Summit, he challenges the assumption that a new tool alone already brings change. His thesis is that it is not the model that disrupts the market, but the company that orchestrates the models. Ruppert sees AI as an orchestra made up of many intelligent systems, and the real competitive advantage emerges where customer decisions are made. For online printers, this does not mean ‘Which AI tool do we use?’ but rather ‘How do we orchestrate data, models and processes into an experience that others cannot offer?’
A look into the customization group’s playbook
One important tool for creating an experience that others cannot offer in the same way is mass customisation. Because it turns standard products into individual, personal items. Someone who recognised the importance of mass customisation early on is Philipp Mühlbauer, founder and co-CEO of what is now The Customization Group (TCG). In his OPS presentation ‘Execution at Scale: The Playbook behind TCG’s global Momentum’, he offers a behind the scenes look and shows how the idea of personalised products became a successful, scalable business with multiple locations in Europe and the United States, as well as numerous well known brands. A key focus is the question of how millions of individualised products per day can be translated into robust processes, from business to consumer and business to business shops to API based models that integrate seamlessly into other platforms as ‘Customisation as a Service’. The example of TCG, which since 2025 has also included orwo.de and sendmoments, raises an important question: if others are running mass customisation at this scale, how long can you afford to treat personalisation as a niche experiment?
Textile printing, transformation, TikTok
Someone who has made personalisation the core of their business and is currently scaling rapidly is Michał Tracz, CEO of Print Logistics in Poland. As the next generation leading a family business that is more than 30 years old, he and his brother launched a smart factory in 2018 for the on-demand production of apparel, textiles and home decor products, and have continuously expanded it. Today, Print Logistics is one of the major players in the market, with production sites in Poland, the United Kingdom and the United States, as well as its own print on-demand platform called Snapwear. In his OPS presentation ‘POD Transformation: From Single Orders to High Volume Production, from E-Commerce to Social Commerce’, Michał Tracz will speak about the role that efficient fulfilment structures and social commerce integrations play in the next stage of the textile print on-demand business.
When print launches a counterattack
French online print expert Ludovic Martin brings a thesis to Munich with his presentation ‘Print counter attacks – how to reinvent your business in the new world?’ that may seem too naive to some in the face of an apparently overwhelming digital dominance. Because a digitally overdriven world, he says, is vulnerable, and it is precisely for that reason that print is gaining new relevance again. Geopolitical tensions, cyber risks and the environmental costs of digital infrastructures are forcing brands to reassess their channels. In this context, Ludovic Martin speaks of the ‘quest for tangible’, a trend in which people are increasingly seeking physical touchpoints again that build trust and have a longer lasting impact than a swipe. In this logic, print shifts from a by-product to a strategic pillar, embedded in customer journeys shaped by conversational AI, AI commerce and agentic commerce.
What will remain of online print as we know it today?
‘In view of the disruptive power of AI developments in recent years, business as usual is no longer an option. At the Online Print Summit 2026, we are not discussing whether AI, platforms and creator ecosystems are changing the rules of the game, but how fast, and what that means for strategies, processes and people within companies,’ explained Jens Meyer, managing director of Verband Druck und Medien Beratung GmbH and OPS co-organiser.In 2026, the programme of the Online Print Summit connects the conference with new dialogue oriented formats such as the executive briefings and the C Level classrooms into a programme that deliberately asks uncomfortable questions, while always providing context and guidance. Because when AI takes over workflows, creators build brands and platforms control access, it is not enough to refine existing product lists.
Anyone looking for impulses for new business ideas, answers to current developments, or partners for implementing innovative business models should not miss OPS.
Further information can be found at www.online-print-summit.com



















