Here is my math... at $25/ea we make about $5-$7 ea with $4-$5 Coro, $8 Vinyl/Consumables, $6 Labor/Overhead.
Installing these on an app table we average 30/hr. So that's $150/hr in profit or $1500/day for our standard day in just those. We are a small operation so those numbers are good for us... your mileage may vary.
Jesus. At $40 each on coro ... I would need to sell 50 at that price just to make it worth my time. maybe if they also bought a bunch of other stuff too or were repeat customers i would sell it to them at that ... maybe.
Your numbers are incredibly understated on the labor/overhead side of the ledger. If you have the gear, material storage, purchasing power and staff size to knock the cost of the material, labor, time, etc.. down that far, you're a bigger shop with high speed grand format capability than you're copping to here.
The cost of that level of productivity must be included in the equation. I also don't believe you have the kind of staff that can mount a 4'x4' sheet of vinyl to coro in 2 minutes each over the span of several consecutive hours. Do you chain them to the machine and not pay them anything near a family wage?
The rest of your numbers are all over the map and hard to comprehend. Nobody in their right mind factors in as a norm, a 10 hour work day dedicated to pure productivity. I'd have to be here about 15 hours to actually be productively working only on signs to reach 10 hours of "productivity" in a day. I don't know how you figure your idea of a work day, but it seems at odds with what most "small" businesses experience.
Part of it is bragging I think, but if you can mount 30 of these in an hour with even a conservative productive time of about 6 hours per day unless you are a real slave driver, how often do you actually get 180 to do in one day?
Sorry you work in a state that bends you over and drives your costs up. We pay much less then you in electricity, we average half that and have a smaller space. My costs are all factored in to my overhead... would you like to see my SignVOX shop rate sheet?
We all have families, we all have time off. In a world of automation... leverage the tools available to you. We use SignVOX and quickbooks, pay a CPA to balance our books, use a collection agency to chase late funds, and on and on. Stop wasting time "running" your business and leverage low cost services.
I don't want to engage in topic drift, but these last few posts have caused me to bring up a deeply related topic that none of us seem to want to address, the intrinsic value of the advertising that should be included in the cost of a sign. I don't see where political signs should be excluded from that discussion.
The "commodity" approach sign producers rarely or never seem to factor that in, while I notice many of the so called dinosaurs (myself included among them) at least try to look at it as a part of the price of everything we do. I think what ends up happening is we all swim in the same pool and we who think it should be included, often end up having to back it out because the "commodity" high volume, lowest price producers force our hands with their sans intrinsic value pricing usually being the key difference in the bidding. The "commodity" approach producers throw insults around like calling us dinosaurs, living in the past and such, but in the end we end up losing because the true value of the advertising we create isn't being fully paid for, which drives the entire market down.
The winners in this oversight and downward pressure on overall pricing? The hard driving, loyalty devoid, low price above all other factors customers, the equipment and consumables dealers and sales reps and the bankers and leaseholders carrying the loans on all the equipment that anyone wanting to survive in such a hostile environment "must have" in order to keep up with the Jones'.
Sign and graphics workers and employees also end up losing ground as their primarily bottom line oriented employers try to trim costs wherever possible to stay afloat while affording more, bigger and faster automation equipment. The actual skillsets required to work in a 21st century "sign shop" of that type resemble a Kinko's franchise store than an independent, multi-faceted, creativity driven, community anchored enterprise like a traditional sign shop.
LIKE I SAID..........workin harder to make a few pennies on the dollar..........
4' X 8' @ $100 is ridiculous!!!!! at $50........ITS STUPID)))))
here again we see what this "mcDonalds model" selling has taken a PROFITABLE BUSINESS into the toilet.
today there is NO PRECEIVED VALUE!!!!! to anything.
as a COMMODITY.......he who sell the cheapest will sell the most.............is the norm.
in all my years most signage i have done was based on SQUARE FOOT pricing. and a long time ago when i 1st started full time.........someone told me
ANYTHING going out the door at less then $5 sq foot............WAS LOSING MONEY, or leaving money on the table FOR ME!!!!!!!!! i have stuck by this in most jobs i do. even for R.T.A. vinyl i cut/weed/tape........i get $7-8 a sq foot!!!!!
i dont work for PENNIES... if i wanted to do that i would be flippin burgers at some fast food place.
a 4'x 8' is 32 sq feet.............at $10 sq ft it is $320.00! at $5 sq ft it is $160.00. so to make this understandable to the $100 AND $50 ones....YOU AINT MAKIN ANY MONEY.......
AT $100 for a 4 X 8.........comes out to $3.12 sq ft and at $50 it $1.56 sq ft!!!!
lets just hold out at $5 sq ft...........now $160.00 YOUR PROFIT....... is in there. on coro............YOUR MAKING A WAGE.
at $100 your just running the printer....at $50.......ITS LOSING MONEY!!!!