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shortrun

Shortrun is a term used to describe limited-volume production across manufacturing and publishing sectors. It denotes quantities produced that are too small to justify traditional mass-production setups and often requires flexible processes, digital tooling, or on-demand capabilities. Shortrun projects are common during product prototyping, market testing, limited editions, or customization efforts.

In manufacturing and product design, shortrun production relies on adaptable workflows, quick-change tooling, and near-demand capabilities.

In printing and publishing, shortrun refers to short-run printing or on-demand printing where small quantities are

Economic and operational considerations: unit costs are higher per piece than in long runs, but total cost

See also: short run (economics), small-batch production, on-demand manufacturing, rapid prototyping.

Techniques
include
low-volume
injection
molding
with
soft
tooling,
CNC
machining,
rapid
prototyping,
and
additive
manufacturing.
These
approaches
reduce
upfront
tooling
investment
and
allow
iterations.
produced
quickly,
often
with
digital
presses.
This
enables
cost-effective
experiments
with
layouts,
content,
or
formats
without
committing
to
large
print
runs.
Typical
applications
include
marketing
collateral,
short-run
books,
packaging
samples,
and
test
catalogs.
may
be
lower
due
to
reduced
inventory
and
lower
risk
of
unsold
stock.
Lead
times
can
be
shorter,
enabling
faster
time-to-market,
but
setup
and
changeover
efficiency
remain
important.