Retail marketing has changed. The number of SKUs grows month after month. Promotions are more frequent. Prices change faster than ever. And customers expect perfect accuracy — without exception.
Yet many FMCG and retail chains still rely on InDesign automation as the “best possible solution.” At first glance, that makes sense. There is a template. There is a script. There is a connection to an Excel file. The process is faster than it used to be.
But in the age of AI, the question is no longer whether something is faster than it was ten years ago.
The real question is: is it good enough for today’s scale, speed, and complexity? The answer is simple — it is not.
InDesign automation solves part of the problem. But it does not solve the core issue. And the core of modern retail leaflet production is massive amounts of data, constant changes, and the need for full control without bottlenecks.
The modern retail promo cycle is no longer 200 products. Many chains produce 48, 64, or more pages per month, which can be 1,000+ SKUs.
At that scale, even a small mistake becomes expensive.
InDesign automation works by filling predefined templates with data. That sounds efficient. But in practice, every template has limitations. Every structural change requires a designer’s intervention. Every special promotion requires additional adjustments.
The problem is not the tool. The problem is the model.
The model still places the designer at the center of the process.
When you need to:
it is no longer an “automatic solution.” It becomes another round of work.
With 1,000+ SKUs, every small change multiplies. Automation turns into accelerated manual work.
The AI era, on the other hand, assumes a system that understands data structure — not one that simply pours data into a layout. If the layout is just a slightly smarter template, that is not real automation.
It is only a faster version of the old logic.
Retail is dynamic. Prices change. Suppliers are late. Images arrive in different formats. Campaigns are adjusted at the last minute.
In theory, InDesign automation enables quick updates through linked data.
In practice, the process often looks like this:
Excel → export → InDesign → review → manual correction → review again → PDF → another fix → re-export.
Every change goes through the design team.
That means:
In the age of AI, we expect a system that can process changes without destabilizing the entire layout.
But InDesign automation is still based on static logic. If text exceeds the allowed length, someone has to fix it. If an image is in the wrong format, someone has to adjust it. If a price “jumps” outside its designated field, someone must correct it manually. And all of this happens inside a design tool that is not accessible to the whole organization.
This means design control remains mandatory at every step.
In large catalogs, the number of micro-corrections becomes enormous. Every small adjustment triggers a chain reaction. And the team enters firefighting mode.
If the designer is still the person who “keeps everything under control,” then this is not transformation. It is simply a faster version of the old process.
Another myth of InDesign automation is that it solves the process end-to-end.
It does not.
Print preparation is still a separate step. Color checks. Image resolution checks. Bleed margins. Fonts. Different versions for different formats.
When you produce two or more catalogs per month, with parallel print and digital versions, complexity grows exponentially.
InDesign can help. But it does not remove the need for:
At the end of the process, a designer or DTP operator must still review everything.
And that is the key point.
If the system cannot guarantee structural accuracy, responsibility remains with a human. And if a human must review 64 pages filled with thousands of data points, automation has not eliminated the main risk — error.
In retail, a single incorrect price can mean lost margin or reputational damage.
That is why teams do not blindly trust automation. And that is why every page is still manually reviewed.
In the AI era, expectations are different. We expect a system that:
If the final step still requires exhaustive human review, then we have not left the old model behind.
The biggest weakness of InDesign automation is not technical. It is conceptual.
It starts from design as the center of the process.
In the AI era, we start from data as the center of the process.
In the old model:
Design carries logic. Data adapts to the layout.
In the new model:
Data is the single source of truth. The layout dynamically adapts to the data.
That is a fundamental difference.
For FMCG and promotion-driven retailers, the challenge is not creativity. The challenge is scale and operational efficiency.
In this environment, semi-automation becomes a limitation.
Because:
An AI-driven approach assumes a system that understands catalog structure dynamically. A system that can reorganize pages when 200 SKUs are removed. A system that validates prices before they enter the layout. A system that generates multiple versions without manual work.
That is not a “better InDesign.”
It is a different philosophy.
The value of InDesign automation should not be underestimated. It significantly improved DTP processes. Compared to fully manual production, it is a major step forward.
But in the age of AI, the question is no longer whether the process is faster.
The question is whether it is scalable, predictable, and resilient to errors when a catalog contains thousands of SKUs and changes happen every day.
If:
then automation has not fulfilled its promise. It has only accelerated a process that can now be redesigned entirely.
The future of retail belongs to systems that eliminate operational bottlenecks — not just speed them up. At a time when data grows faster than teams and budgets, half-measures are no longer enough. AI is not just an add-on to existing tools. It is an opportunity to redefine the entire process.
And that is why InDesign automation — however useful it once was — is no longer enough.
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