Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
In the beginning it was a cupcake job with one print location, one color. Now they've decided they want to put their custom labels on every shirt and I do not want to deal with this in-house. It took a month just to find a shirt that they liked, and this customer has the potential to be big, so by adding the neck label we've essentially doubled the work and labor involved and they will be placing large orders so it's kind of a big deal. I'm looking at it from the standpoint of the job just having 2 print locations like most of our stuff, but the large quantities and the hassle with dealing with custom labels has me wondering what I should do. LAT had initially offered to label the shirts with the custom heat transfers but has since taken that offer off the table, and now I'm looking at maybe opening the shirt brand choice back up. We were going to have the labels made, sent to LAT, then they would decorate that part then send the shirts to us and then boom...cupcake job, ability to knock out 5K a day if we needed to, bla bla bla. Now we are looking at having to label the shirts, not to mention taking all of the tags off the shirts, and I'm not going to buy a label printing machine and hire 2 people to run it without seeing how this line of clothing is going to work out. I know some would buy what they needed but we all know that for every couple of thousand of customers that walk through the door with the "next big tshirt design" only 1 of them actually sells 1000 shirts and maybe 1 in a million does anything worth buying equipment for. So my long-winded questions are for you shops that do custom labels for customers, do you just print it in-house, or do you get hot peel labels made and heat press them? Does anyone have them labeled prior to arriving at your shop by the shirt manufacturer or third party? It sure would make my life easier if they were done like we had planned originally and we would just print the design and be done with it. And there are other things that are making this whole venture not seem so worth all the effort that I've been putting in. The customer comes by the shop EVERY DAY, and not to be rude but I'm so busy I don't even have time to take a break to eat, much less visit and talk about things that we've already talked about a dozen times. I can feel like they have doubts about us being able to fulfill their orders but they haven't ordered more than 80 shirts at a time up to this point and although I really think this could actually take off, I'm not so sure I want in on this since we have so much work right now we can't get everything done with 12 hour shifts, 6 days a week. I try to tell them that the amount of work we have right now is about 3 times more than our usual workload and while I'm trying to manage a very busy shop I just don't have time to hold hands and do all the leg work in trying to get the custom label thing done and they also see that. They've offered to help with all of that, but nothing has really been done that I can feel good about going forward. The guy keeps asking me how we're going to print 50K shirts when his line blows up and where we're going to park the shipping containers and I just tell him we'll cross that bridge when we get there but the fact that the questions keep being asked I feel like I'm going to be doing all this work only for them to leave to a larger shop that tells them what they want to hear. They've been through several shops already and settled on us due to the print quality, but these days you can never count on customer loyalty.I know it's a long read, and many of you have dealt with this before and currently and I could use some good advice right about now. Should I just screen print the labels in-house? Or should I continue to pursue someone else doing them prior to arrival here? Any and all options are welcomed. Or should I just deal with the known customers and recommend another shop to them and not be so stressed out about this all the time? I really do think this could be big due to the contacts this guy has, but the work we have to do not counting this customer is unbelievable and my plate is more than full. If this does work out we'd have to buy another press more than likely, but how long will this last is my long-term concern. Ok, I'm babbling now, thinking out loud and I've probably lost most of you already. GIVE ME OPTIONS!!!!!
Maybe it was lost in the lengthy post, but how many pieces is the initial order? A low budget option is to buy a couple heat presses (cap), have the transfers made, and hire a couple temps to press them. Overall cheaper than adding tag printing equipemtn or additional permanent staff until necessary. If it's 5k or less, just run them off on an auto with the sleeve plattens. Done in a day most likely.
Alan,What is the feasibility of creating a one color manual right next to your dryer to do the smaller runs of neck labels? You know... just until his 50k order comes through.....
I like the idea of the mini auto but at this point I'm not ready to drop even a few thousand dollars on a press because I have zero faith that I'll find someone that would run it..besides myself of course.