The possibilities and challenges of artificial intelligence in the print industry took centre stage at the Prinect User Days 2026 event, which set a new visitor record with over 400 international participants.
The keynotes, presentations, and workshops by software and AI experts focused on automating processes in response to continuing cost pressures, the skills shortage, and an increasingly fragmented job structure.
In this context, the event was the ideal opportunity for Heidelberg to launch Prinect Touch Free – its new AI-driven workflow initially unveiled by the company at drupa 2024.
Prinect Touch Free controls print production on a fully automated basis, deciding on the most efficient and cost-effective output channel for the relevant print jobs based on the actual PDFs.
“The number of web-to-print jobs our customers are receiving has increased by more than 60 percent worldwide over the past year,” said Axel Zöller, product manager for Digital Workflow at Heidelberg.
“Conventional, manual methods can no longer handle this volume of jobs cost-effectively. An ‘automation offensive’ like Prinect Touch Free is what’s needed.”
The pilot customer Meinders & Elstermann started working with Prinect Touch Free at the beginning of December 2025.
Volker Havel, a member of the company’s senior management team, described how work to connect the Jetfire 50 digital printing system took only about 90 minutes before the first jobs were being printed as part of a test production run.
“Our primary objective was for automation to bring a sense of calm to the digital printing process, which has a highly fragmented job structure,” Havel explained.
Heidelberg also unveiled a new AI chatbot for its Customer Portal, which will soon go live for all portal users, who now number more than 9000.
At this first stage, the tool will help answer questions about Prinect Production and the apps available in the Customer Portal, meaning there will no longer be any need to search for answers in Prinect Online Help.
Following the subsequent addition of a data chat function for data-based inquiries, the chatbot will also be able to answer questions relating to machine documentation and operation.
In the future, Heidelberg is also intending to equip its service ticket app with an assistant to help customers create tickets and include as much relevant information as possible. It is envisaged that this will make services even faster and provide Heidelberg with more information about customer requirements.
“The Heidelberg chatbot combines validated knowledge from Prinect and the Heidelberg Customer Portal in one smart assistant,” said Jürgen Grimm, head of Prinect at Heidelberg.
“Customers will be given context-related answers directly in the portal, while service teams will also be able to access in-house expertise – worldwide and round the clock.
“This will result in faster problem-solving, enhanced user-friendliness, and international know-how sharing.”
With more than 400 participants attending the two-day program at the Home of Print customer demonstration centre at the Heidelberg Wiesloch-Walldorf site, the Prinect User Days 2026 beat last year’s attendance record by some margin and set a further record in the event’s long-standing history.
“The Prinect User Days are, without question, a success story. The further rise in popularity demonstrated by the number of participants underlines the necessity and potential of this practical event that provides plenty of scope for dialog, knowledge transfer, and networking,” concluded Grimm.
