"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I feel your pain. My first larger job was 4350 pc white shirts with 4 color process and 1 spot color on a 6 color workhorse manual "Every morning I felt like I'd been in a car wreck the day before". It took a week and a 1/2 to get a little over half of them done because it was just me and my wife trying to print, answer the phone and deal with walk-ins. I was bound and determined to finish them no matter what it took. While we were approaching the 3/4 mark, we received another order for 3800 more. I thought "no way" and that's where the first automatic came in. It was a large investment, but I haven't looked back. It seems that the business has picked up significantly and it's definitely paying for itself.
Quote from: ShirtShackandMore on July 21, 2012, 04:56:03 PMI feel your pain. My first larger job was 4350 pc white shirts with 4 color process and 1 spot color on a 6 color workhorse manual "Every morning I felt like I'd been in a car wreck the day before". It took a week and a 1/2 to get a little over half of them done because it was just me and my wife trying to print, answer the phone and deal with walk-ins. I was bound and determined to finish them no matter what it took. While we were approaching the 3/4 mark, we received another order for 3800 more. I thought "no way" and that's where the first automatic came in. It was a large investment, but I haven't looked back. It seems that the business has picked up significantly and it's definitely paying for itself.Those are some nice jobs. Are you contract. The biggest job for me today is 1750. I think its my pricing that keeps then away. I get about three to five 250 to 500 orders a month but not much larger.
Quote from: Screened Gear on July 21, 2012, 06:41:45 PMQuote from: ShirtShackandMore on July 21, 2012, 04:56:03 PMI feel your pain. My first larger job was 4350 pc white shirts with 4 color process and 1 spot color on a 6 color workhorse manual "Every morning I felt like I'd been in a car wreck the day before". It took a week and a 1/2 to get a little over half of them done because it was just me and my wife trying to print, answer the phone and deal with walk-ins. I was bound and determined to finish them no matter what it took. While we were approaching the 3/4 mark, we received another order for 3800 more. I thought "no way" and that's where the first automatic came in. It was a large investment, but I haven't looked back. It seems that the business has picked up significantly and it's definitely paying for itself.Those are some nice jobs. Are you contract. The biggest job for me today is 1750. I think its my pricing that keeps then away. I get about three to five 250 to 500 orders a month but not much larger. We do very little contract work. Those jobs were from a church about 110 miles from us. Now we average about 2800 pieces a week but that consist of several jobs anywhere from 24 to 500 pieces per job and rarely anything over 500. They are mostly for churches, schools, hospitals, and reunions. Although I know it could change at any given time it just seems that since we've bought the sportsman 2 years ago that business has really picked up. We also make signs,do truck lettering and make banners. I'm hoping that if the shirt business keeps picking up that we can drop some of the other stuff "mainly signs and truck lettering". Time to do those 2 things is becoming scarce.
I've given a lot of thought to downsizing to a single color press 2 station , ditching the shop rent, go back to printing out of my bacement and contract everything else out. That way I'm not completely quiting the business but quiting a lot of the head aches while being home for my family. Plus the wife wants to go back to work or nursing school (the kids are driving her nuts) this is only solution we can think of but it's soley my decision. Daycare isnt an option, we dont wan't stangers "mistreating" our kids (too many horror stories).