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title: Can Word and PPT Files Be Sent for Printing? A Senior Consultant's Guide to Avoiding Office Software Conversion Pitfalls
lang: en
source: https://mindsprt.dev/en/knowledge/office-to-print-pdf/
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# Can Word and PPT Files Be Sent for Printing? A Senior Consultant's Guide to Avoiding Office Software Conversion Pitfalls

*File Preparation · 4 min read · 2026-07-05*

> SMEs often use Word or PPT to design catalogs. While they look perfect on screen, printing them frequently leads to disaster with white borders and color variations.
This practical guide teaches you how to overcome the fatal flaw of office software—the lack of built-in bleed settings—and squeeze the highest quality print files out of their native features

**Quick answer:** SMEs often use Word or PPT to design catalogs

## Can Word and PPT Files Really Be Sent Directly for Printing?

The answer is yes, but only if you correctly export a high-quality PDF and manually "fake" the bleed through page setup.

When handling these kinds of office software files on the production line, MS Printing (MS) most frequently encounters clients who just throw over .docx or .pptx files. This results in fonts being automatically replaced by the system, layouts completely falling apart, or even the entire batch being scrapped.

Office software is inherently designed for screen viewing and office printers.

They understand light-emitting RGB colors but not the CMYK inks used by printing presses. Their default layouts fit perfectly on an A4 sheet, but they are unaware that print shops need an extra 3mm buffer when cutting paper.

Having spent over a decade in production, I have seen far too many heartbreaking cases.

A local hardware factory spent ages painstakingly laying out a 64-page product catalog in PPT. When printed, a white border was cut around their full-bleed background colors because they didn't know that standard A4 dimensions need to be expanded on all sides by dimensions that are initially invisible to the naked eye.

## Why Is It Full Bleed on Screen but Printed with a White Border?

This is the most common lament I hear on the print shop floor.

After printing large sheets of paper, the print shop stacks hundreds of sheets together and cuts them to the final size using a guillotine cutter.

When slicing through a thick stack of paper, a physical tolerance of 1 to 2mm is inevitable.

If your background color is designed to align exactly with the edge, this tiny shift will expose the unprinted white paper edge.

Bleed: A printing term referring to an area where the background color or image intentionally extends 3mm beyond the finished dimensions. It absorbs cutting tolerances to prevent white paper borders from appearing on the edges of the final product.

Word and PPT do not have this feature by default, so we have to trick the software to set it up.

・Open Page Setup and directly add 6mm to both the width and height of the paper size (for example, for A4 210x297mm, set it directly to 216x303mm).

・Stretch your background color block or full-bleed image to fill this new, enlarged size.

・Retract all important text, logos, and product images inward by at least 5mm from the edge into the "safe zone" to prevent them from being cut off.

## How to Squeeze the Highest Quality PDF Out of Office Software

When faced with blurry prints, many clients innocently say, "But I saved it as a PDF!"

Upon opening the file, the images have turned into a pixelated mess.

To make files easy to email, Microsoft's built-in conversion mechanism aggressively compresses images by default, often dropping the resolution to 96dpi—far below the print standard of 300dpi.

I usually ask clients to perform the "MS File Rescue Trio," which is the most effective way to prevent the tragedy of blurry images.

・Never click "Save As." Instead, use the "Print" function and choose the virtual printer "Microsoft Print to PDF."

・Click Printer Properties to access advanced options and force the print quality to its maximum setting.

・If you have Adobe Acrobat installed, using the plugin's "Save as Adobe PDF" and applying the "High Quality Print" setting is the most reliable solution.

This not only preserves image details but also solves the most troublesome issue of missing fonts and garbled text.

Proper PDF export securely embeds fonts into the file, ensuring the layout prints exactly as intended even if the print shop's computer doesn't have the fonts you purchased.

## Where Are the Color Limits of Printing Office Files?

To be honest, when printing with Word or PPT, you must be mentally prepared for the finished colors to inevitably turn darker.

Office software only supports the RGB color model, which consists of screen colors produced by additive light. Printing presses, however, use CMYK inks, which rely on reflective light to display colors.

When an RGB file is sent to the print shop's system and forced to convert to CMYK, those blues and greens that look highly fluorescent and vibrant on screen usually turn dull and muddy when printed.

This is a physical limitation, not because the press operator messed up.

If you are on a tight budget and must handle documents in Word yourself, I highly recommend ordering a small proof run first through online platforms like MYS Printing (MYS).

Confirming that the color discrepancy between screen and paper is within your acceptable range before outsourcing mass production is the most practical risk management strategy.

## Key Takeaways

・The golden rule of printing office files: Never hand over the raw source files; you must export a high-quality PDF with embedded fonts yourself.

・Word and PPT do not have bleed settings; you must manually add 6mm to both the page width and height to serve as a fake bleed, and maintain safe margins.

・Avoid using "Save As" when converting files. Instead, use the print-to-PDF method to extract the highest resolution and preserve image details.

・Accept the inherent color shift of RGB-to-CMYK conversion, and set reasonable expectations for how vibrant colors will look on the printed output.

## Further Considerations

There is no absolute good or bad tool; it all depends on your tolerance for error in the finished product.

If it is just a one-time internal training manual, converting it from Word to PDF and printing it directly is perfectly fine. However, if it is a product catalog that represents your company's image, leaving professional tasks to designers who use professional software will save you communication costs and reprint waste—making it far more cost-effective.

The consultant team at MS Knowledge Academy often meets clients who tried to save a few thousand dollars on design fees, only to end up with an entire batch of unusable printed goods. That is by far the most expensive tuition we see on the production floor.

## FAQ

### The images in my Word document look very clear on screen. Why do they print so blurry?

Word compresses images by default to reduce file size, whereas printing requires a resolution of 300dpi. We recommend turning off image compression and selecting high fidelity in the software options before inserting images, and then exporting them by printing to PDF.

### Can I just send the PPT file to the print shop and let them convert it for me?

Highly discouraged. Opening a PPT on different computers easily triggers font replacement and line-spacing shifts. The layout the print shop sees will definitely not match what is on your own computer. Converting it to a PDF yourself is the only way to lock down the final design.

### I set up a fake bleed, but the text is still getting cut off. What should I do?

This happens because you did not leave enough of a safe distance. Critical graphics and text must be at least 5mm away from the set page boundaries to survive the physical tolerance variations during cutting.


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