Hi - Pretty certain I am losing money every month by not creating accurate estimates. Can anyone recommend a software program THEY are using and give me an estimated monthly cost for same? I am currently using SignCraft Magazine tool - but it really doesn't cover everything and I'm sinking. Help! Please. Thanks
What you should be taking advantage of from your subscription is the Overhead Calculator. The SignCraft pricing guide is simply a starting point with a few shop rate levels factored in but even that isn't 100% of the picture. If we accept the fact that most materials we use are similar in price no matter where you operate, the next step is to determine what our true costs of operating are. Where things start diverging is that a 2,000 square foot shop may rent for $1,500 in your neck of the woods, but might be $2,500 per month where I'm at.
Also, the variations in wages, quality, established local pricing and a million other things color how to calculate your overhead and pricing structure. We operate in a town of 28,000 and it has 4 brick and mortar sign companies and several other snappers working from their garages, living rooms, etc. From what I can see and hear from my colleagues when we talk, the shop rates fluctuate from about $40 per hour for the one man shop working from home still doing only cut vinyl to $85 per hour for our three person shop in a 2,500 square foot shop in a bona fide, high exposure industrial park. When we bought the business five years ago, the shop rate was only $50 and the outgoing owner needed out. He had succumbed to the race to the bottom with a shop a few blocks away that was only charging $45 per hour and doing wraps without laminate, using the lowest grade materials, paying his help substandard wages and NO benefits whatsoever. Not even paid holidays.
Given the high cost of living and wages needed to attract and retain decent help in this area, everyone's rate should be closer to $100 per hour.
You have figure out what it costs you to operate day in and day out and then check it at least once a year. You also need to take whatever feedback you can get on your pricing and see what the market thinks of your value. I imagine there are only a few shops in a town your size, so you'll need to try and establish good enough relations with the other shops to get a glimpse of whether or not you all are commanding similar pricing. Are there big talent and skills disparities among you. If you're new to the trade and it shows and you're up against my long time friend Noel Weber, a master craftsman with over 50 years experience and world wide recognition, that could be why you lose bids, not just how you price the work.