artwork and finishing specialists
print production managers & environmental graphics manager
installation and on‑site delivery leads
operational workflow support
Artwork and Finishing Specialists
Artwork and finishing specialists within the folc. take responsibility for the accuracy, consistency and readiness of artwork as it moves from creative development into production. This includes file preparation, version control, pre-flight checks and coordination with print and production partners.
They operate inside agency-led teams to ensure artwork is technically sound, correctly specified and aligned to final production requirements — reducing errors, rework and last-minute compromise. Their role is to protect creative intent by ensuring it can be delivered cleanly, at scale and under pressure.
Print Managers
Print Managers own the end‑to‑end print process. They confirm specifications, select or manage suppliers, and oversee schedules and proofs to keep production on track and within budget. Their focus is practical: ensuring that printed outputs align with the brief, are delivered on time, and meet required standards without excessive rework or cost overruns.
They act as the central link between creative teams, fabrication partners, and installation or delivery leads. By maintaining clear version control, handling material choices, and enforcing quality checks, Print Managers prevent the common pitfalls of rushed or complex print jobs. Their presence stabilises the workflow and allows other specialists—installation leads, operational support—to proceed with confidence that the physical outputs are reliable and ready for the next stage.
Installation and on‑site project leads
Installation and on‑site project leads take charge when projects move from planning into the real world. They coordinate teams, manage site access, oversee safety, and ensure installations happen to plan—on time and without unnecessary disruption. Their responsibility is the moment when an environment becomes live, which requires calm decision‑making, precise logistics, and clear instructions to multiple teams working in tight spaces or under time pressure.
Beyond physical build, these leads handle communication between the venue, suppliers, and internal teams, clarifying roles and tasks so everyone knows what happens next. They anticipate risks, control the sequence of work, and ensure that de‑install or handover occurs cleanly after the event or activation. Their role is critical in live events, exhibitions, or installations where delays or mistakes can multiply quickly; they limit risk, protect quality, and keep delivery under control.
Operational workflow and creative operations support
Operational workflow and creative operations support specialists maintain clarity and control across the entire production process. They manage timelines, dependencies, budgets, and day‑to‑day coordination—ensuring that creative, suppliers, and on‑site teams work in step rather than at cross‑purposes. Their work prevents bottlenecks, duplication, or missed handovers, particularly when an operation is fast‑moving or under pressure.
They also support change control, risk management, and prioritisation. When issues arise—unexpected changes, delays, or resource constraints—these specialists help the team decide what to do now, what can wait, and how to communicate those decisions with minimal noise. That steadies delivery and keeps the focus on practical outcomes rather than endless status updates. Their value is the operational backbone: making complex production workflows manageable, predictable, and accountable from brief to final delivery.