This is exactly why I steer away from walk-ins. The $25 job just cost you 20 minutes of fishing stories and will be another 20 when they pick-up. For this reason, I like my pick-up area.I'm toying with this myself currently, we started off as an engraving shop, and as such we get walk-ins looking to get their fishing trophy engraved, or a charcuterie board engraved etc. these are all usually 1 off customers who I will never see again, we have a $25 engraving minimum order, which is higher than most other shops in the area, but at best i break even at this price by the time the client comes in and chats my ear off about all the fish he caught blah blah blah.
I'm going to start telling these people that the lead time for small one off orders is 3 weeks, that way they will either go somewhere else, or it will allow me to either run these jobs during down time, or batch them together for better efficiency. I think it will scare most of these people away, usually they come in end of day thursday, and "need" it for saturday, then they pick it up the following Wednesday.
Wild. I've tossed around the idea of 'opening' a banner shop, called City Banners, then setting up one employee to handle the calls and art, then just producing them like normal, or hell, even just start ordering through s365 or firesprint and having hands off the 'hard' work. Glad to hear it's been viable for someone else.Many years ago, a friend of mine had a really nice screen printing business going, but only textiles, no flat stock. We'd do business back & forth cause I didn't do textiles and he needed signs from time to time and we'd talk about these little orders that were always dribbling in and taking up valuable time. His approach was..... he started a second company, but in name only. Had it's own name, phone and 2 people. Now, these people could work in either business cause it was still all in the same building. His second business started to take off and he hadda hire more people. Both were highly successful. He recently retired, but said he did the right thing starting the second business, cause his rates were different, although it was all handled the same.
I often wonder if these "wholesalers" solicit direct business if they see enough volume coming through from one of their sign shop customers. Similar to what Amazon did to sellers years back. Under a different name of course so nobody knows the differenceDo/did you realize..... all the big companies do that, like gemini, print companies and other industries, too ?? They advertise in magazines, on the web and today all kindsa other places as a particular name and the same people answer the phone. According to which line you call in on..... is how they answer and give prices. Gemini will sell to the end user as well as regular customer like us. They just don't give the same discount. However, if someone calls in enough, they'll offer them wholesale prices and then they cut our throats.
Some definitely do, I know 4over has a retail site that sells at pretty much the same "wholesale" pricing as we get.I often wonder if these "wholesalers" solicit direct business if they see enough volume coming through from one of their sign shop customers. Similar to what Amazon did to sellers years back. Under a different name of course so nobody knows the difference
A little different with this one... retail supply first, then wholesale. Sign Warehouse (started in the late 90s) formed their wholesale company, thebannerstore.net around 2011. No doubt they're using their import buying power to keep costs down at their wholesale biz.Some definitely do, I know 4over has a retail site that sells at pretty much the same "wholesale" pricing as we get.
If you do, can you get this guy to answer the phone?Wild. I've tossed around the idea of 'opening' a banner shop, called City Banners, then setting up one employee to handle the calls and art, then just producing them like normal, or hell, even just start ordering through s365 or firesprint and having hands off the 'hard' work. Glad to hear it's been viable for someone else.
This is only nominally funny any more, as my hometown has since become home to The Rong Chinese Restaurant... their general zho's is to die for!If you do, can you get this guy to answer the phone?
They got one heck of a deal. Didn't you know the government pays $1,000 for a toilet seat, $600 for a hammer? And that was back in the 90's. But seriously, good job it looks like you do very nice work.
American Eagle wants you to commit to $10,000 before they will discuss a professional website with you...To update the decision to go internet-based.....
I paid $365.00 to have a professional website made.
$375.00 in advance for a year of website hosting.
A few weeks later, my very first sign that I sold through the website was to the Recreational Center, US Naval Air Station, Atsugi, Japan for $1300.00.
So, my very sign paid for the transition and made me "global" in terms of sales potential. And it took off from there.
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whooaaaa $10k is ridiculous.American Eagle wants you to commit to $10,000 before they will discuss a professional website with you...
My only pointvwas, there is quite a rangevof what constitutes a business websitewhooaaaa $10k is ridiculous.
The guy that did mine was some home-based computer geek who did websites as a side gig to his "day job". and he was darned good at it.
Yes, That was "my" good deal.