Yes and no.
I've always been firm on charging what you need to get to keep your doors open, feed yur employees and have a nice well oiled machine running. We're all in it, to make money and put some away, too.
However, if the shop next door is fabricating everything in-house, has a much higher overhead and set of costs to do business and charges out at $2,500.00 while for you to do the same item is $950.00..... and you have everything figured in and might have one or two middlemen in there helping you, but you were willing to accept $950.00 Why go all the way up to $21,120.00 when you don't need to at all ??
Because your overhead doesn't exist..... how does that equate to more than doubling your needs ?? I could see adding an extra hundred or two, but not 200%. However, if that's how you like it, then more power to ya. It just doesn't sound like a very fair way to play.
For those that think it is best to only worry about what they will charge and ignore the current market, I disagree. Everything is down to price price price these days, so if I want to compete, I need to know what the market is currently bearing, and charging. It is very important IMO that I know about my competitors' current price structures. If not, I will learn about it when my business dries up, then I will be reacting to a sudden loss of orders, that could take months to climb out of... If everyone else is quoting lower grade materials and cheap cheap prices, with no art charges, then it is going to be a tough go if I quote the best materials with art charges. I need to know this. I am not saying I should work for free, or whatever, but I should have a product that is comparable or else not bother quoting, or have a strategy that deals with what is going on. To put my head in the sand about the market is not smart IMO.
The other side of this is I also do not want to be way lower than everyone else, leaving money on the table.
Call or visit a new sign holder and ask how much he paid for it and how long he waited. I think this is at least another answer and the least costly.I am still wondering about the original question, which is how do you guys do your market research?
Market value matters. Anyone that argues that it doesn't has a poor understanding of how capitalism works. That's not to say you can't buck trends and add value in other places (service, quality, design and marketing) but generally speaking, market value matters. If you think Walmart doesn't do market research into their competitors, you're kidding yourself. Walmart is about as big as anyone in retail but they still monitor the market.
Just going by your expenses is not a good way to price. You could run a very expensive shop but put out middle of the road work. To charge the "right" prices you either need to improve your product or lower your costs. Just like you could run an inexpensive operation cranking out top quality work. Does this mean I should charge less than my competition? Just looking at expenses in either of these situations means you're going to be priced poorly in a competitive industry. This idea of my expenses dictate the market is flawed because you can adjust your expenses. Not all of them are fixed costs with absolutely no wiggle room. In fact, few of them will fall into that category.
Please reply with how you propose to handle your pricing once you learn the price of any competing product / service.
So, with these signs, if your sign is exactly like the other guy's why take your price up to theirs ??
I am not sure what I will do once I learn the prices. I have many options, and the moves I make will depend on the info I gain. I could offer lesser cost products using lesser materials, I could charge more for my product if I am way low... I need the info and will take action (or not) based on the market.
What do you do when you regular client doesn't want to wait a couple of weeks and they call around and find someone that can do it sooner? I get these type of calls from clients that (used) to use my local competitors that are running 2-3 weeks on simple signs... all the while I'm charging more then them and making the customer happy... Win-win.
So anytime someone needs to raise a price it's slimy? No one likes paying more but it's a fact of life that stuff increases in cost... a fact most people understand.
I have 2 BIG repeat customers that order sometimes weekly and I am SLOWER at raising their price... but if I can't control the amount of work coming in and the big customers keep hitting me up then eventually they go up too... those two I deal with on a separate basis.
I can appreciate you making it work for you, but I think it can present some organizational and consistency challenges in cases like repeats and how to justify the different pricing to somebody who you did something for $500 one month and then in a lean month its only $350 and in a heavy month its $750.
I no longer check other shops pricing. I've been told by more than one client that I'm towards the higher end. So I started asking why they keep coming back. All said the same thing, which is delivering high quality work on time and at the quoted price.
No lies to get the job. No BS excuses. No sub-par work.
I do business the same way I like to get treated.
I don't do that
I'm sincerely interested in how you make it work and keep it all straight in both your head and the client's heads on a daily basis. Or does it not apply to frequent customers?
I often take what pissed off customers that come in here say with a grain of salt. Too often they dictate what they want, despite being told what is proper, and when it goes south, they badmouth the person who did it and conveniently leave off the "I told you so" detail.