How to Create a Professional Flyer Using Avery Templates: A 6-Step Checklist from a Quality Inspector
- Step 1: Choose the Right Avery Template (Don't Guess)
- Step 2: Download and Set Up in Word or Google Docs
- Step 3: Build Your Content (The 'What to Put on a Flyer' Part)
- Step 4: Preview and Pre-Flight (The Review Step)
- Step 5: Understand Your Printing Surface (The Step Everyone Skips)
- Step 6: Cut, Fold, and Distribute
- Common Mistakes to Avoid
Let's be clear upfront who this checklist is for. If you're a small business owner, a marketing coordinator at a growing company, or an office administrator tasked with creating a promotional flyer (maybe you saw that Aldi flyer this week and thought, 'I could do that'), this is for you. You don't have a dedicated design team, and you need something that looks professional, not homemade.
This isn't a design theory article. It's a 6-step, battle-tested checklist I've refined over years of reviewing thousands of printed deliverables. I've rejected flyers for color mismatches, typo-riddled layouts, and specs that made them unmailable. The goal here is to make sure your flyer doesn't end up in the trash—or costing you a reprint fee.
One more thing: step #5 is the one most people skip. I learned that the hard way in my first year.
Step 1: Choose the Right Avery Template (Don't Guess)
Your design lives or dies by the template you pick. Start by going to Avery's template library. You can search by product number, or by the type of flyer you want.
Here’s the checklist item:
- Identify your size. Common flyer sizes are 8.5" x 11" (letter) and 5.5" x 8.5" (half-letter). Avery has templates for both.
- Match the product number. If you're buying a specific pack of flyer paper (like Avery 5162 or 8163), use that template. They are not interchangeable. I've seen a batch of 2,000 flyers ruined because someone used the 5160 template for 5162 paper.
- Consider the content. A photo-heavy flyer for a new K-drama poster needs a landscape layout. A text-heavy Aldi-style weekly ad needs a grid template for product listings.
My rookie mistake here? In my first year, I assumed 'standard' meant the same thing to every vendor. I approved a design on the 8163 avery template, but the file was formatted for the 5162. Cost me a $600 redo. Templates exist for a reason.
Step 2: Download and Set Up in Word or Google Docs
Avery's main advantage is universal compatibility. You don't need expensive design software.
- Go to Avery Design & Print Online. Their online tool is free, and it works in a browser. It can handle most of what you need for a standard flyer.
- Or download a Microsoft Word template. For more complex layouts, or if you prefer offline work, download the .docx file. It comes pre-formatted with margins and text boxes in the right places.
- Verify the dimensions. Open the template. The text boxes and images should snap to the page. If you're adding a 3x5 image area, make sure it fits within the template's safe zone. I recommend using Avery's own software for most jobs—it's simpler.
Quick tip from experience: When working in Word, don't resize the template's text boxes by hand. You'll break the alignment. Use the built-in 'Avery' tab in Word if it shows up; otherwise, just use the online tool. It's less headache.
Step 3: Build Your Content (The 'What to Put on a Flyer' Part)
This is where your message goes. I've seen flyers with amazing design but terrible copy, and vice versa. The balance is key.
- Headline: 3-5 words. Your flyer has about 1.5 seconds to capture attention. Use a clear call to action. '20% Off This Week' or 'New K-Drama Poster Release' is fine.
- Body: Bullet points only. No paragraphs. If you need to explain details, use a list. Think about an Aldi flyer—it's just a list of products and prices.
- Visual: One strong image. A single, high-resolution image of your product (the 2025 K-drama poster) or a mockup of your service area. Avoid clip art. It makes you look amateur.
- Call to action: Single line. 'Visit our website' or 'Call now.' With a phone number or URL.
The way I see it, beginners try to cram everything onto one page. Leave some white space. It looks cleaner and more professional. If you have too much text, make a two-sided flyer or a trifold brochure instead.
Step 4: Preview and Pre-Flight (The Review Step)
This is the most common place for things to go wrong. I've rejected nearly 15% of first-time deliveries in my career due to issues found in this step. Do not skip it.
- Check live text. Read every word out loud. Look for typos, wrong addresses, and expired dates.
- Check margins and bleed. Avery templates have a 'print border' zone. Anything outside that might be cut off by your printer. If your design has a background color, make sure it extends past the edge (bleed) into the waste area.
- Do a test print. Print ONE flyer on plain paper first. Check if the alignment is correct. Does the text fit inside the text boxes? Are the images sharp? If it looks wrong on screen, it will look wrong on paper.
Here’s a specific communication failure I saw: A designer said 'I checked the margins' and meant they looked at them on screen (where they were invisible). The client meant they printed a test. The result: 50,000 flyers shipped with 1/8" of the headline cut off. Communication ambiguity costs money.
Step 5: Understand Your Printing Surface (The Step Everyone Skips)
This is my most important point: the template on your screen is not tailored to your printer. What is the paper stock? Is it glossy, matte, or standard copy paper? This changes how the ink behaves.
- Check your printer's driver settings. If you are using glossy paper, set the printer to 'Photo' or 'Glossy Paper' mode. Standard mode on glossy paper often causes ink to smudge or look washed out.
- Test the stock you intend to use. Avery flyer paper (like their 8163 business card stock) is often a heavier weight. Different paper absorbs ink differently. Your home laser printer will behave differently than a professional copier.
- For large batches, use a print shop. I have mixed feelings about online printers. On one hand, they are convenient for standard products. For 1,000+ flyers, use a dedicated shop like 48 Hour Print (not an endorsement, just a known option). They handle high-volume ink coverage and paper thickness better.
My rule of thumb: If you're printing 1-200 flyers, your office printer is fine if you follow the above steps. For 200+ or any professional presentation, outsource it. The per-unit cost is higher, but the consistency is worlds better. According to USPS (Business Mail 101), consistent print quality is essential for bulk mail approvals.
Step 6: Cut, Fold, and Distribute
If you printed standard 8.5" x 11" flyers, you're done—no cutting usually required. But if you used a half-page template or a shaped card, cutting is a separate step.
- Use a paper cutter, not scissors. Scissors will yield a wobbly, unprofessional edge. A guillotine cutter (like the classic office model) is best for straight cuts.
- If folding is needed, use a bone folder. Folding by hand leaves creases. A bone folder gives a clean, professional fold.
- Sanity check the quantity. Did you print 200? Good. Now count 50. That's your first distribution batch. Don't put all 200 in a pile; it screams amateur.
Final distribution checklist:
- Bulletin boards (check local regulations for posting)
- Direct mail (ensure you have correct postage—USPS First-Class is $0.73 for 1 oz)
- Hand delivery to local businesses (a personal touch works wonders)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Don't overcrowd. More white space = more perceived value.
- Don't use too many fonts. Stick to 2 max: one for headlines, one for body text.
- Don't ignore the fold. If you fold, design the two halves separately to line up.
- Don't use low-res images. 300 DPI is the minimum for print. If you grabbed a K-Drama poster off Google Images, it's probably 72 DPI and will look pixelated.
The most common mistake I see? Beginners skip step 5, print a beautiful design on the wrong paper stock, and wonder why it looks dull. The tool matters, but the material matters just as much. You wouldn't print a wedding invitation on notebook paper. Treat your business flyer with the same respect.
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