15 years ago I was getting $325 for a single-sided 4'x8' handpainted uninstalled sign.
I charge way more than that now be it hand-painted or cut vynull.
There is no way I'd do a sign that size for $250.
Let them go to the local hack.
I can't understand why, if printers are so expensive, materials, etc the price of everything is going up, that people charge so little.
Have you ever gone to the doctor and had a rather expensive procedure performed and the doctor gives you a bill of $138,733.86 and you submit it to your insurance company and the doctor settles for $23,488.92 ??
I know exactly what you're saying, but try to remember something....
Back in the day, we hand lettered Automobile Dealership Pricing Signs or your average Pool Rules Sign and they had to be perfect. To get every lower case '
e' and '
s' all the same along with all the upper case '
O's having the same roundness, it took practice and skill. It took a steady hand and a small 3' x 4' 1-sided sign would bring in maybe $200 or $300 dollars. It took maybe 4 or 5 hours to finish. It took about $20. worth of wood sealed, painted and top coated and maybe $1.00 worth of lettering paint. If you were charging $25 an hour, you got yourself a nice deal going. You basically doubled your money. Now, you and almost every other member on this forum and in almost every other sign shop USA and around the world, now rely on electricity, expensive equipment, vinyl, application tape, labor, substrates, overhead and whatever else it takes and you only get $350 for a 4' x 8' sign. You've bought all that equipment, inventory and put away your brushes and paint and have a much higher overhead to only get still nothing for your effort.
As the industry changes, it's a given that the costs are gonna be higher, but bring in the novices and they ruin not only the quality and the craftsmanship, but the business end of it as well.
So, buying machines and creating overhead just goes with the territory. As many on here understand, these big machines are expensive, but you can't always get your way if the guy down the street is working on volume and less profit. If he turns enough to keep his/her employees paid, the bills paid and has enough to stay satisfied, what's wrong with it. We're all doing it.
As mentioned, by wholesaling it or doing it in house, you can more than triple or quadruple your costs on a job like this and still make a good buck.
Does it happen ?? Yes, but not very often.... at least not to us. We generally get our price, but I will work with people if I deem it necessary and profitable enough.