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Don't you just love....?

James Burke

Being a grandpa is more fun than working
Don't you just love it when a customer drops the name of a competitor AND freely shares the lower quote they received?

For a $550 job, my competitor will travel a total of 200 miles more in his drive than I will (all said, he's traveling a total of 270 miles round trip). He's already lost money with just travel time and mileage alone.


JB
 
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James Burke

Being a grandpa is more fun than working
I can't share the nature of the project, but I strongly suspect the customer will be an extremely pushy PITA...thanks to the "Amazon" culture we live in today.

JB
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
"would you mind sharing the measurements of the sign?"


That's an old trick. I know of two sign shops around here, who will put the wrong measurements in their quotes on purpose. Generally 2" too small, especially on electric sign faces. Never go by that stuff, unless it's for quoting purposes only. Go physically check each and every sign for yourself...... or just be prepared.
 

Stacey K

I like making signs
200 miles? Who drives that far to install a sign? I would be too scared I would mess something up and have to drive back to the shop. I suppose it depends what type of job it is.
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
I've always thought about doing something like this myself, but I'd be too worried I'd get the job and somebody here would use those to f.ck it all up. Like my old man says, I don't need to try to make trouble for anyone else, I make enough for me already.

Ya just hafta be careful.

Here's one from back in the 80's. We had a nice gig going with a complete outlet complex around here. They had literally 100's of stores. We did the signs for the management and they would give our name to the tenants as the new ones would come in. We weren't the authorized shop, but it was understood we gave the best prices, service and quality compared to others in the area. After doing this for about 7 or 8 years, a new guy came to town. I'll never forget the name 'Egan Signs'. Buncha brokers who acted like they did the work themselves. Bob, the owner, had no skills whatsoever, except for being underhanded and the gift of gab. He pushed his way in but never got anything, until he got the ear of the one salesperson and made a deal with him to give him 10% of the job, if he got my bids to him. He then underbid me by a few dollars and got a job here or there. Turns out a guy for whom we did numerous locations for him here on the East Coast, wanted to open a second store in this vicinity and he said, give me a quote real low and I'll give it to Gary, he'll give it to Bob and he'll beat your quote by a few bucks. Well, I didn't do that, but I did do it for another tenant. The job was for around $4,800 which was a good sale back in 1989. So, I actually bid it out for $480. He was awarded the job at $450. Once he got the job and got started on it, he knew instantly what had happened. He didn't even read my quotes, he just told his quote girl to beat my price at any cost. Oops !!! That was the beginning of a great friendship. We never had another thing to say to each other after that. He hadda do the job for what he quoted, but he tried to get even with me. He's been long outta business and is hawking his software wares in the sign industry. It's a piece of sh!t, but he fooled enough people in the beginning it was fantastic. Not.
 

fastmax

New Member
Some people are either really screwed up with their math or the guy is lying to you. I wouldn't wanna go that far for anything, unless I was being paid well...... r-e-a-l-l-y well.
Ya just hafta be careful.

Here's one from back in the 80's. We had a nice gig going with a complete outlet complex around here. They had literally 100's of stores. We did the signs for the management and they would give our name to the tenants as the new ones would come in. We weren't the authorized shop, but it was understood we gave the best prices, service and quality compared to others in the area. After doing this for about 7 or 8 years, a new guy came to town. I'll never forget the name 'Egan Signs'. Buncha brokers who acted like they did the work themselves. Bob, the owner, had no skills whatsoever, except for being underhanded and the gift of gab. He pushed his way in but never got anything, until he got the ear of the one salesperson and made a deal with him to give him 10% of the job, if he got my bids to him. He then underbid me by a few dollars and got a job here or there. Turns out a guy for whom we did numerous locations for him here on the East Coast, wanted to open a second store in this vicinity and he said, give me a quote real low and I'll give it to Gary, he'll give it to Bob and he'll beat your quote by a few bucks. Well, I didn't do that, but I did do it for another tenant. The job was for around $4,800 which was a good sale back in 1989. So, I actually bid it out for $480. He was awarded the job at $450. Once he got the job and got started on it, he knew instantly what had happened. He didn't even read my quotes, he just told his quote girl to beat my price at any cost. Oops !!! That was the beginning of a great friendship. We never had another thing to say to each other after that. He hadda do the job for what he quoted, but he tried to get even with me. He's been long outta business and is hawking his software wares in the sign industry. It's a piece of sh!t, but he fooled enough people in the beginning it was fantastic. Not.


thats awesome, a good ol rivalry. im surprised he didnt jsut hire you to do the jobs he did get anyway
 

HulkSmash

New Member
Alot of competition will do it for cost just do you won't get it. That's fine with me. For us to get in a truck and do a job outside of our location is a 500$ minimum, even if its 10 minutes away and hrs on a door. because no matter what it takes more time than you EST, then the hassle of it is just not worth it unless you charge.
 

bannertime

Active Member
My family used to do vacation jobs. We'd do jobs all over the country and make a vacation out of it. It wasn't for signs, but for our other outdoor event company. I've done a few jobs in other states while visiting family. In fact, my dad regularly drops off orders on his away up to see family. So, if that was the case, I could understand that.

My favorite thing is when a customer shows me their "artwork" and it's just a picture of the screen with the file open in Flexi.
 

Category5

New Member
My favorite thing is when a customer shows me their "artwork" and it's just a picture of the screen with the file open in Flexi.
If I suspect a customer is planning to play me against a local competitor using my artwork, I’ll do exactly that. I’ll give them a photo of the screen taken at a slight angle to make it a royal PITA to copy the design. It’s usually easy to tell when that’s what is going on. I do at least make an effort to not include toolbars and window headers in the photo. There’s a billboard that I drive by every day on my way to work that is a design ripped off from my quote. The only change the guy made was using a different stock photo that came from a different source. Everything else, down to the fonts, is a carbon copy.
 

TimToad

Active Member
I think most of us see these things happen all the time and its a real test of one's professionalism and business ethics. I'm not sure we're unique in these types of actions by competitors. I think way too many of us are too reluctant to turn the tables on a chronic ethics violator, enforce our copyright protections and defend our client base from unethical poaching.

Our closest competitor tried to kneecap our business for years, actively poaching our clients, punishing his employees who refused to do so or who wouldn't lie to clients of ours who accidentally went there, not using laminate on wraps and signs to lower the cost, etc... He even tried to jake our town's mayor who went there looking for us to order campaign signs, which led to his eventual demise for putting up electric signs without a license or permits. The mayor was told we had gone out of business even though I had just spoke to the mayor about his project at a Chamber Of Commerce function the week before.

We often get sent the quotes produced by others from angry potential clients accusing us of trying to gouge them and in nearly EVERY case, its a quote from a shop we know acts unethically on a regular basis, uses an outsource for their production and then barely marks the work up, etc... If others want to spend their day quoting banners at $1.50 per square foot and paying $1.00 for them, so be it. We try to explain it to the angry lost customer, but they mostly care only about price.

We can either be good examples of professionalism, or bad ones.
 
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Gino

Premium Subscriber
Yep, I just looked, same one. Another trick they use is to get their foot in the door with some very reasonable quotes. However, once they get in, the costs start going up. They do so many change-orders, it ain't funny. They have a core group nowadays and all they do is coast through jobs. The storyline he gives on his website, about how he started is so far from the truth, it's just pathetic. Yep, he's certainly a trip.
 

bannertime

Active Member
If I suspect a customer is planning to play me against a local competitor using my artwork, I’ll do exactly that. I’ll give them a photo of the screen taken at a slight angle to make it a royal PITA to copy the design. It’s usually easy to tell when that’s what is going on. I do at least make an effort to not include toolbars and window headers in the photo. There’s a billboard that I drive by every day on my way to work that is a design ripped off from my quote. The only change the guy made was using a different stock photo that came from a different source. Everything else, down to the fonts, is a carbon copy.

One thing a recent customer showed me, the guy had clicked an item inside the graphic so that it had a bounding box around it, center guides, and the artboard visible. So I'll be doing that from now on.
 

HulkSmash

New Member
we take deposits of the TOTAL JOB before any artwork, these solves any and all problems. If not the deposit will for sure cover our time.
 

Gino

Premium Subscriber
we take deposits of the TOTAL JOB before any artwork, these solves any and all problems. If not the deposit will for sure cover our time.


Do you have in the fine print..... all deposits are non-refundable ?? Otherwise, if someone bought a sign package and it cost $8,000. with installation and they wanna get out of it..... do they forfeit the deposit without a problem or just say goodbye to $4,000 for maybe $400. worth of design time ??
 

kcollinsdesign

Old member
If I need to survey a location before bidding, the results are for my use only. If the client wants to see a design, they must enter into a contract and usually pay a deposit first.
 

kcollinsdesign

Old member
If others want to spend their day quoting banners at $1.50 per square foot and paying $1.00 for them, so be it.[/QUOTE]

No, that would be $1.82 per square foot plus shipping. Hems, grommets, original design, and installation extra, depending on needs.

I am a proud out-sourcer. I feel it is more fair to the client to get him or her the best quality product I can for a reasonable price. I am not encumbered by huge overhead and have no need to re-capture the money I spent on (now probably obsolete) printers, sewing machines, laminators, etc. I offer a range of creative services and project management using appropriate technologies available to the industry. My expertise is developing solutions for my clients; I am not a production facility.
 
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