Pat Whatley
New Member
I've been thinking about it for some time now while trying to work out what direction to grow my business in and thought I'd toss it out here.
Where to you see the future of this business?
This is what's coming. There's a little speculation here, most of it is just looking at the facts. Look to Japan...most of this is where they are NOW.
EXTREME HIGH END WORK
-Demand will still be there for the type of work only skilled, talented craftsmen can do now however there will be more and more people developing the skill set to go after that piece of the pie. Technology like 3-D printers and CNC routers will GREATLY speed up the learning curve allowing "any hack with a $40,000 router" to compete with somebody with 40 years experience working with chisels.
TYPICAL DAY TO DAY WORK
-This market will continue to get saturated but not due to $300 vinyl plotters. Faster and cheaper wide format printers will drive production costs down to even less than they are now. With the ability to order things on the internet quicker and cheaper than you can buy them through a store it's only a matter of time before it becomes the norm for most business people to do their own design work in-house, send out the printing, and have $2.00 psf banners delivered the next day.
-Large format copiers will soon eliminate the need for a lot of typical signage. I'm already seeing a hit from them.
-Cheap, huge LCD screens are going to replace a lot of typical signage. When you can do full color, full photographic work, that you can change daily for little more than the design cost it just makes sense.
-In the next five years you're going to see $2000 48" inkjet printers hit the market. From what I hear you'll be able to feed 1/4" foamboard through them, as well. No, they won't work for long term work and won't work at all outdoors (yet) but they will take a huge chunk of the day-to-day market.
DESIGN WORK
-Mid-range design work will take the hit from hell. With the influx of "designers", the 100,000 pieces of good clipart (and millions of pieces of bad art), pre-designed templates, and ready to go layouts there will be less and less demand for "designers". A secretary can already get a free template and use it to produce professional results in minutes. The willingness to pay for custom design work for mid-range projects will be gone.
MATERIALS
-We're going to be POUNDED by the green movement.
-It's just a matter of time before we have to start paying extra disposal fees on the completely non-recyclable waste this industry produces. I've got 6 refrigerator boxes of silicone covered backing paper, PVC, and vinyl weedings that are going out tomorrow. That stuff doesn't just rot away.
PRODUCTION
Kinko's and FastSigns are just starting it but it's where I see the future. Most offices will be little more than ordering kiosks. All production will be done in regional production centers. It's a beautiful system...you can have 100 locations but only need a handful of skilled technicians who can run a CNC router, or massive digital printers, or that bank of flatbed printers. When the cost of high-end, high-output equipment is split between 30 regional locations there's no way a local shop will be able to compete. Adding new locations will cost next to nothing...the technology and skilled training investment is all in the central production facility....basically fixed costs.
It all concerns me, somewhat, though I don't see any of it killing my business. Business is all about adapting, you've just got to identify where it's going so you can figure out how to still be around when it gets there.
Where do you see it heading?
Where to you see the future of this business?
This is what's coming. There's a little speculation here, most of it is just looking at the facts. Look to Japan...most of this is where they are NOW.
EXTREME HIGH END WORK
-Demand will still be there for the type of work only skilled, talented craftsmen can do now however there will be more and more people developing the skill set to go after that piece of the pie. Technology like 3-D printers and CNC routers will GREATLY speed up the learning curve allowing "any hack with a $40,000 router" to compete with somebody with 40 years experience working with chisels.
TYPICAL DAY TO DAY WORK
-This market will continue to get saturated but not due to $300 vinyl plotters. Faster and cheaper wide format printers will drive production costs down to even less than they are now. With the ability to order things on the internet quicker and cheaper than you can buy them through a store it's only a matter of time before it becomes the norm for most business people to do their own design work in-house, send out the printing, and have $2.00 psf banners delivered the next day.
-Large format copiers will soon eliminate the need for a lot of typical signage. I'm already seeing a hit from them.
-Cheap, huge LCD screens are going to replace a lot of typical signage. When you can do full color, full photographic work, that you can change daily for little more than the design cost it just makes sense.
-In the next five years you're going to see $2000 48" inkjet printers hit the market. From what I hear you'll be able to feed 1/4" foamboard through them, as well. No, they won't work for long term work and won't work at all outdoors (yet) but they will take a huge chunk of the day-to-day market.
DESIGN WORK
-Mid-range design work will take the hit from hell. With the influx of "designers", the 100,000 pieces of good clipart (and millions of pieces of bad art), pre-designed templates, and ready to go layouts there will be less and less demand for "designers". A secretary can already get a free template and use it to produce professional results in minutes. The willingness to pay for custom design work for mid-range projects will be gone.
MATERIALS
-We're going to be POUNDED by the green movement.
-It's just a matter of time before we have to start paying extra disposal fees on the completely non-recyclable waste this industry produces. I've got 6 refrigerator boxes of silicone covered backing paper, PVC, and vinyl weedings that are going out tomorrow. That stuff doesn't just rot away.
PRODUCTION
Kinko's and FastSigns are just starting it but it's where I see the future. Most offices will be little more than ordering kiosks. All production will be done in regional production centers. It's a beautiful system...you can have 100 locations but only need a handful of skilled technicians who can run a CNC router, or massive digital printers, or that bank of flatbed printers. When the cost of high-end, high-output equipment is split between 30 regional locations there's no way a local shop will be able to compete. Adding new locations will cost next to nothing...the technology and skilled training investment is all in the central production facility....basically fixed costs.
It all concerns me, somewhat, though I don't see any of it killing my business. Business is all about adapting, you've just got to identify where it's going so you can figure out how to still be around when it gets there.
Where do you see it heading?