Joe Diaz
New Member
I hardly consider wraps are in its infancy. We have been doing them for 14 years now.
If anything it a over saturated industry with every shop that has a capable printer calling themselves experts.
It also by no means is a niche market but a robust profitable industry that accounts for more than half of our production.
It is also a very competitive market even for the one off wraps. So the margin will keep going down for the service provider both printers and eventually the installers.
We do not do any design so it is hard for me to comment on the integrity of a good design and its advertising effect for the end user.
14 years, is still pretty young. And you may have been doing it for quite a while, But for the rest of use, not until recently have distributors been cramming wrap products, services, and the overall idea that every sign shop should be doing wraps down our throats. And, since only a small hand full of the sign industry really knows what they are doing when it comes to wraps, and there is a lot that our own shop still doesn’t know about wraps, I would say that yes the wrap industry is still in its infancy. Compared to other industries, really there isn’t as much information available, especially on the design end. Like I said very little government restrictions, if any at all are put in place for this industry. Yet another sign the wrap industry is still in its infancy.
And it’s debatable if it is a niche market or not. There are plenty of businesses that can operate solely off of what I consider a niche market, which really isn’t a bad thing. I also assume that these types of companies that can do so are in more developed urban markets. Niche market only means that it’s a service that isn’t being supplied by the mainstream industry. And the findings of this pole so far only further backs up my assumption that the wrap industry is a niche market. Not a lot of sign shops seem to be providing wrap related services as their sole source of income.