How do you make any money with a $30 profit margin?? I just don't get it. I don't see it. A special limited time sale is one thing. Actually pricing them out at that all the time is something else. I know what your suggesting doesn't work long term as I did exactly what you were suggesting my first 6 months in business. When my bank account was empty and the power got turned off for non payment was my wake up call that it just doesn't work. Then I got smart and started charging more and now I have money in my bank and my power stays on.
It was a response to a $35 one off...profit on that is also probably around $30, likely less if you don't have scrap coro that size around and you had to design something. The profit margin isn't the same as profit by the way. Again, charge what your market can bear, I'm merely saying there are other ways of getting your same margins and making your customers happier while getting a larger marketing footprint.
This is the EXACT same thing everyone on the forums says when we discuss how to test if your market can support new equipement. Outsource it, find the market price, see if the numbers can handle the expense. The only difference is the context of the conversation.
I don't know, maybe my area is more competitive, Wisconsin has always been swimming with printers as it's an industrial economy with a huge share of the paper manufacturing market. I like to push the market I'm in while making a quality product and over delivering to customers on product and promises.
Maybe to change tact, have you ever bought a larger sized soda when you intended not to, because it was ONLY a tiny bit more? Same technique. That soda vendor sure profited from providing you with more product at slightly thinned margins. Again if you can sell one at $35 you can sell 10 at $100 or 10 at $140 or whatever your market dictates. The client will see and bite on the "value" and you end up with thicker pockets with lower time and cost investments.]
Anyway I think I've restated this as much as I can for the day.