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Dont forget to show your workings guys - we have two figures, 201.85/199.99 and 270
Thanks BTW
@Haunted Worlds I'm confused. I just read back through the thread and you seem to be arguing against your own points. You used Drew Pritchard as an example, but his model demonstrates my point perfectly. He doesn't add a set markup to what he buys, he literally sells for whatever the market will accept. If he buys something for a tenner, and can sell it for a grand he will.
The way we have worked out the figures basically creates a job for you at 25 quid per hour. Personally I think you could do better.
That pretty much sums it up, I want a job, with me at the helm, providing enough to live on comfortably not lavishly and also enough left to get the odd new tool or once every few years a bigger bit of plant if needed.
Everyone could likely do better, but the question is do they want to, or are they happy as they are???
As I say, that was very quick and done on my phone whilst eating a sandwich so don't be too critical!
A one man band is more able to sustain himself making high value, highly priced but low volume products with a large margin.
Cost your time and your materials. That's your absolute bottom line. If you charge more than that, you're making a contribution towards your overheads. After that, it's all magic and assumption. If you were producing just one component you'd draw a graph showing your variable costs (T&M) inceasing with volume. On the graph you have a horizontal line which is you fixed overhead costs - rentals, power, telephone etc. Where the two lines cross is where you start making a profit. There'll be an explanation of it somewhere on economics websites.
But I don't think you're going down the right business path - as someone else said - there's no margin making basic everyday objects - that's for the mass manufacturing process. I'd seriously consider making up-market, 'designer' art objects. It's a big market where you don't concern yourself too much with cost and think a lot about price. A one man band is more able to sustain himself making high value, highly priced but low volume products with a large margin.
Plasma cost £1600 for the cutter and £5000 for the CNC table, probably estimate 5yr life.
Plasma consumables on this job - £10 max probably £5
Gas - £45 for a bottle, lasts maybe 6-7 hours continuous welding.
Mig Wire - negligible, £19/reel, usage on this job maybe 1/10th reel or less
Electric - maybe call it £10 per day, probably less
Grinding disks - £4 for this job
Time to drive to galvanisers and back - 1 hour
Labour - what would you charge here?![]()
I can see where you guys are coming from with the idea of the up-market high value stuff but, and this is a very very big but.. coming up with designer stuff that can happily carry the price tag desired needs one thing that I am very short on - creativity!
Sorry, but I disagree.
All of the products Dave makes are bespoke products no matter how large or small - it's not off the shelf stuff therefore how can he price according to the market?
Example: Look at Drew Pritchard - technically speaking of course no offence to the chap as I actually love what he does... buys crap at a low price sells same crap after a bit of a spruce up (in some cases he doesn't even touch the stuff!) sells for a higher price... and he does it well!
That is a totally bogus calculation!
That is like asking "What does it cost to build a car?" and I say, well, a VW Golf has a marginal build cost of about £2,500 and you say "Ah, that is as may be, but I am building this car out of matchsticks!"
Or how about "How long does it take to start a fire?" and I tell you that I have put a ball of newspaper, some cardboard and kindling down and have lit the thing and it is burning merrily in 60 seconds - and you say "Ah, yes, but I am starting a fire, by rubbing two boy scouts together!"
In other words, there isn't a single task in that lot that I would do the way you are doing them! We are talking hanging basket brackets here (I hope!) and not the Space Shuttle!
A few pennies worth of mild sheet steel, cut with a simple punching machine or a band-saw and bent to take its footing with an ordinary bending machine and welded to its footing with a spot-welder and finished with a small hand grinder, then throw into an acetate bath to clean. That whole process should not take more than five minutes.
Follow that up with chucking it in some primer, followed by finishing paint and then bake - job's a good'un!
Drew Pritchard sells according to the market - Products that Dave manufacturers cannot be sold according to the market they have to have a realistic sale price based upon cost of manufacturer.![]()
My costing example was not a few pennies worth of steel, what was it, £27 ok not a pile but not insignificant.
Not being personal, but based on your description of your finished product, it would be exactly like every other £2.99 Homebase bent POS with the paint or so-called coating dripping off of it, poorly held together and produced as cheap as possible - EXACTLY what I do not produce. I try and produce a product where the quality holds it above the bottom-feeding junk already on the market, way above.
1. So these brackets weigh about 20 kilos??!!
2. Spot welding is in no way inferior to MIG welding - it's just cheaper and quicker!
3. I remain convinced that you are producing the wrong product.
Let's look at this again. You are able to build a steam traction engine. That makes you an engineering hero in my book!
And you are using that level of knowhow, equipment and skill to bang out cut-out dogs??? In the words of that great thinker, philosopher and poet, Dizzy Rascal "Bonkers!"
blimey what a thread
you need 2 streams of work....
bread and butter work that pays the bills and the other work that gives a fat profit then over time build up the fat profit work and reduce on the bread and butter.
Marketing is your only issue.
It has been from day one.
You seem to have neglected the most important single factor in your (or any) business.
Without marketing you are not targeting your correct customer type, nor charging the "appropriate" price.
Research how similar types of businesses, manufacturing similar products, market their products.
This is not a one hour job and should be your primary consideration.
You will also get inspiration from your research.
To be frank, to charge your time at £25 per hour, you may as well be an employee at an engineering company. (Management, given your capability).
Set up charge - this could be a fixed amount per job, regardless of size. Rather like the call out charge for a plumber. This is an important element to include.
Materials - direct cost
Time - calculated to pay the hours worked on this item only.
Worth - any addition you feel you can make as additional profit. (eg factors like the value to the customer, how busy you are at the time, the uniqueness of the job)
Marketing is your only issue.
It has been from day one.
You seem to have neglected the most important single factor in your (or any) business.
Without marketing you are not targeting your correct customer type, nor charging the "appropriate" price.
Research how similar types of businesses, manufacturing similar products, market their products.
This is not a one hour job and should be your primary consideration.
You will also get inspiration from your research.
To be frank, to charge your time at £25 per hour, you may as well be an employee at an engineering company. (Management, given your capability).
But not even if you were just looking to replace a day-job and had lowish outgoings - no kids, no mortgage, own workshop etc???
You're right, 100%. There's a lot to be said for earning enough self employed, and no more. The freedom, doing what you want when you want, no staff issues, business plans, bank "managers", overdrafts, business loans, leases. I've been there and done it, and honestly I've now "created a job for myself" and never been happier. Forget growing a business and enjoy earning a decent living on your terms.