Might depend on how low they tried to get you to down to, while you said no.Oh that is a tough one. I guess on how off it is.
Might depend on how low they tried to get you to down to, while you said no.Oh that is a tough one. I guess on how off it is.
3 days
Customer will show up 2 hours late, installers moved on to next project
The truck in the picture isn't the truck that was dropped off (no one questions it)
Tailgate vinyl is cut way too big (no one measured, just looked at a picture)
Customer calls the next day and says he has a different phone number, and since we are changing the phone number his wife wants it to be a different color.
Finally get the truck done, looks nothing like the proof or what the customer approved. Sits for 2 more days waiting for pick up.
I know a guy that can do that whole job in 3 minutes and charge $1200.... and he can take a picture of the clock to prove it.Wow, y'all are always talking about how much ya pay your employees, then til ya add in overhead and insurances...... oh and taxes and all the other sh!t, your shop rate is only $85.00 an hour ??
If you count input on the computer, cutting, printing and weeding, then taping it all up and figuring out where it all goes, getting it straight on there shouldn't be a problem, but to each their own, ya'd be around 3 hours or so and with the h!t Factor included, about $415.00 + tx, That's all providing ya have no interruptions or you clock in & out for all kindsa other crap.
That's also for a clean truck coming in and all we hafta do is give it an alcohol bath.
Another thing I've found out in recent years is the use of glasses..... eye glasses
T
Labor rates are determined by marking up the "burdened" cost of labor (actual pay plus payroll tax, workers comp,
Sometimes, but after doing it for so many years I already have a good idea what my cost is on that type of job. No need to break out a calculator each time unless there are special circumstances -- like specialty films, multiple vehicles, etc.So most of you are basing your time on, truck is clean, Layout where everything goes, vinyl all cut and transfer paper applied. When does that ever happen? “Oh, I can do that in 20 minutes with no measuring, been doing it for 20 years."
This is exactly why we never print the graphics until the vehicle shows up to our shop.3 days
Customer will show up 2 hours late, installers moved on to next project
The truck in the picture isn't the truck that was dropped off (no one questions it)
Tailgate vinyl is cut way too big (no one measured, just looked at a picture)
Customer calls the next day and says he has a different phone number, and since we are changing the phone number his wife wants it to be a different color.
Finally get the truck done, looks nothing like the proof or what the customer approved. Sits for 2 more days waiting for pick up.
This is a really good explanation.Sometimes, but after doing it for so many years I already have a good idea what my cost is on that type of job. No need to break out a calculator each time unless there are special circumstances -- like specialty films, multiple vehicles, etc.
I quote based on 7125 or IJ-180 unless there's a specification to match a client's requirement (e.g. University, franchise, etc). I won't cripple a job by subbing in "cheap" materials to save a few bucks. Price is based on similar jobs I've done in the past combined with a general sense of fair market value for that finished product. My quotes are little high anyway (to account for any unforeseen issues), but if the actual job uses less material or I can nest things for better efficiency, I'll discount the final invoice accordingly.
On a side note: Getting better, learning new techniques, streamlining workflows, etc... all those things add to my value. The pursuit of improving my skills is for my benefit and to improve profit margins. It's not for shrinking the number of billable hours I can generate, or figuring out ways to do a $500 job for $200 (which ultimately hurts our industry). In the sign biz... hourly shop rate isn't the issue... it's figuring out how to fill your day with billable hours. Sitting around writing up quotes is a non-billable time sink.