To a point Derby, but with that mindset, you're giving into the weakest link. Sure, everyone wants to make a buck, but why not give the best we've got for the best buck they can afford ?? If you continue with.... well, that'll do..... the next person looking at that sign might be a potential customer, until they see the quality and/or craftsmanship of your last creation. They might say to the sign holder.... who made that piece a sh!t ?? I'm never gonna go to that clod. Besides, like I said, this is not a cheap sign. It's a routed and hand painted sign. It deserves more than a.... well, that'll do. How would one build up a scrap book or website portfolio with half/a$$ed signs in it ?? You don't build a good reputation by just getting by.
However, if you disagree and wanna keep making that kinda work, be my guest. It's just more people clamoring at the good sign shop's doors.
Gino, I totally agree with you. I'm trying to keep a roof over my head though. You can't force a customer to choose an aesthetically pleasing design. You can make that sign look as good as you possibly can though.
I'm not going to do design work for free. If a customer brings me a crummy design, I'm going to (tactfully) offer to fix it for them: for the rate which we charge for design. The vast majority of the time, the customer says, "Nah, I designed this, I like the way it looks."
It's different when you're working with firms or large companies that have designers on staff, but not every sign can be a winner. Would I like to make every sign a work of art? Yes, I would. I can't have printers sitting idle and employees twiddling their thumbs between cool jobs though. So if a company wants to print 200 yard signs designed by Jim from accounting (who had a semester of design in college back in 1976), YES. I'll print those.
[Edit: To further clarify my point, not just from a design perspective, how often do customers come in and ask for a recommendation? You tell them one thing and they say, "Well, can we do it cheaper?" and you give them some suggestions. "Well, that's still too expensive, can we do it cheaper?" Cheaper, cheaper, cheaper. That's what most customers and companies care about. So that's what WE have to care about.
It's the way of the world. We live in a disposable society. I don't want to replace my washing machine every two or three years, but that's what happens, because we don't care about quality any more. I'd love to have some furniture that wasn't slapped together in some Chinese factory, but I can't afford a handmade kitchen table, so guess what? I replace my stupid kitchen table every few years.]