Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I own a screen printing company in VA, and was looking to get into contract printing. I was wondering a few things.........1. How many colors should an automatic machine have if trying to get into contract work?8 is plenty, you could probably get away with 6 but will have to turn some jobs down. It would get you started though. We ahve an 8 color press and had to turn down two or three jobs in last few years. One of them was for 20k pieces so it hurt, but almost everything can be done with 8.2. Is there a certain manufacturer you would recommend I look into and if so acertain machine from that manufacturer that would be ideal for contractprinting. most presses will do what you need. We have an MHM and are pretty fond of it. They do supposedly have the fastest setup time (due to the registration system) which when you are going through a lot of orders make a difference. I should add the if going with M&R make sure to get the trilock as just like MHM FPU it will save you a lot of time.3. How important is it to be able to do specialty jobs i.e. puff, specialeffects?very important and not important at all! Spend a weekend and print few jobs. Just play with it. You will have something to show your customers. In the end, they will never order any of it as it is too expensive (make sure you price it so they don't buy it and if they do you will be charging enough that it is worth the time)4. How important is it to be able to track orders on-line?we don't offer it. . . yet. Eventually, we will, but you can do fine without it.5. How important is it to be able to give free samples or are most companieswilling to pay for it with no complaints?we very rarely give free samples. They always come to the shop or somehow see the goods (at a show for example). Buy 50 shirts (that's $100) and print 25-30 samples you can give away when needed. If printing a cool job, run few extras out of that pile and give them away as needed.6. Is it worth mentioning that we also do embroidery (though not for contractwork) as well as all of the other services we have i.e. banners/signsIf you are not offering it on contract bases it makes no difference. They will not be willing to pay the retail price so they'll care less that you do it. It might even go against you as if they need something else and you charge them retail they will think you are gauging them. Also, most brokers don't want to give work to ppl that are cometing with them! This can be a huge problem!7. Is it imperative to be able to offer packaging, bar coding, hand tags, tag&bag?we don't and are doing fine. We will eventually, but you can start without it . . .8. What is the standard reject rate?what ever your customer allows! Standard is about %1, but it goes up or down from there. In cases when they need exact number of garments, it is 0%. You can not deliver 11 pieces to a 12 man team!9. Is it important to have references?I don't think so. 10. What size job would you suggest we start with to "get our feet wet" with.any job is fine. We print from 1 to 10k, what ever the customer needs. You will not dictate the size of the order. Find somebody who wants to work with you and give it a go.Thanks for any and all advice/suggestions you can give me. Steve
8. What is the standard reject rate?what ever your customer allows! Standard is about %1, but it goes up or down from there. In cases when they need exact number of garments, it is 0%. You can not deliver 11 pieces to a 12 man team!
I try to use shops that turn work in 2 to 4 days.....
QuoteI try to use shops that turn work in 2 to 4 days.....Damn, that's fast for a standard turn. It takes us 3 days to get blanks in from the closest warehouses via UPS ground, as short as 2 days via LTL on the bigger orders so that would be hard for us due to location.