Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quality over quantity tends to be something smaller shops like ours can focus on since were not turning out hundreds of thousands of shirts. I suppose it's a walmart/mom-n'-pop dichotomy.
Why over think it, get them printed collect your money and move on to the next order.
Quote from: RICK STEFANICK on May 03, 2019, 04:39:55 PMWhy over think it, get them printed collect your money and move on to the next order.@ Rick: this comment could be what led Alchemink to think you were preaching quantity over quality! But I'd also say that any comparison of tiny shops to massive shops is a bit of apples to oranges. The first is that they are rarely competitors. Big shops compete with big shops, small shops compete with small shops. (And yeah, there's some overlap for both with mid-size shops, but we won't get into that.) "Quality over quantity" and also "quality over lowest price" are usually things that define you at your own level of competition. Mine is a tiny shop, and I've got customers who pay more for my level of quality; but no national brands are going to be calling me up for it! They're going to go to a "quality" big shop.Another difference between shop sizes is simply how much more exposure a large shop has to different print requests, and thus how much better equipped they are to field those requests at a moment's notice. A big shop may make enough bank on "X" kind of special location printing, they've got it dialed in - dedicated pallets, the optimum ink, the correct process. A small shop who gets the same kind of request only here & there over the years may need to be able to fulfill it to retain a local customer, but they are going to have to approach the project in a different way. When it's not what you do all the time, it's going to be a hassle compared to bread & butter work. There's not much chance of just slamming it through because you've got to figure it out each time. ...And that's one thing that's so helpful about this forum - the chance to ask questions & get valuable input when you need it, from people who know what they're talking about.
Quote from: Prince Art on May 07, 2019, 11:48:14 AMQuote from: RICK STEFANICK on May 03, 2019, 04:39:55 PMWhy over think it, get them printed collect your money and move on to the next order.@ Rick: this comment could be what led Alchemink to think you were preaching quantity over quality! But I'd also say that any comparison of tiny shops to massive shops is a bit of apples to oranges. The first is that they are rarely competitors. Big shops compete with big shops, small shops compete with small shops. (And yeah, there's some overlap for both with mid-size shops, but we won't get into that.) "Quality over quantity" and also "quality over lowest price" are usually things that define you at your own level of competition. Mine is a tiny shop, and I've got customers who pay more for my level of quality; but no national brands are going to be calling me up for it! They're going to go to a "quality" big shop.Another difference between shop sizes is simply how much more exposure a large shop has to different print requests, and thus how much better equipped they are to field those requests at a moment's notice. A big shop may make enough bank on "X" kind of special location printing, they've got it dialed in - dedicated pallets, the optimum ink, the correct process. A small shop who gets the same kind of request only here & there over the years may need to be able to fulfill it to retain a local customer, but they are going to have to approach the project in a different way. When it's not what you do all the time, it's going to be a hassle compared to bread & butter work. There's not much chance of just slamming it through because you've got to figure it out each time. ...And that's one thing that's so helpful about this forum - the chance to ask questions & get valuable input when you need it, from people who know what they're talking about. Thank you for your input. I have been doing this for a few years and have had my own small shops, I know the environment well. What got me is the auto thinking that just because a shop is big its quantity over quality. The one thing I know is industry standards and that applies to small, medium and large shops. If I could take back the 2500 times i spent hours working on something that the client 'even understand I would be driving that new Vette and retired. In my own harsh way I was just Trring to change the stereotype thinking and open up . Just because someone is small doesn't change the fact that the sky is the limit and there is money to be made(AS LONG AS THE PRESS IS SPINNING). I wish I knew someone like me when I was new in this business
Quote from: RICK STEFANICK on May 07, 2019, 12:43:27 PMQuote from: Prince Art on May 07, 2019, 11:48:14 AMQuote from: RICK STEFANICK on May 03, 2019, 04:39:55 PMWhy over think it, get them printed collect your money and move on to the next order.@ Rick: this comment could be what led Alchemink to think you were preaching quantity over quality! But I'd also say that any comparison of tiny shops to massive shops is a bit of apples to oranges. The first is that they are rarely competitors. Big shops compete with big shops, small shops compete with small shops. (And yeah, there's some overlap for both with mid-size shops, but we won't get into that.) "Quality over quantity" and also "quality over lowest price" are usually things that define you at your own level of competition. Mine is a tiny shop, and I've got customers who pay more for my level of quality; but no national brands are going to be calling me up for it! They're going to go to a "quality" big shop.Another difference between shop sizes is simply how much more exposure a large shop has to different print requests, and thus how much better equipped they are to field those requests at a moment's notice. A big shop may make enough bank on "X" kind of special location printing, they've got it dialed in - dedicated pallets, the optimum ink, the correct process. A small shop who gets the same kind of request only here & there over the years may need to be able to fulfill it to retain a local customer, but they are going to have to approach the project in a different way. When it's not what you do all the time, it's going to be a hassle compared to bread & butter work. There's not much chance of just slamming it through because you've got to figure it out each time. ...And that's one thing that's so helpful about this forum - the chance to ask questions & get valuable input when you need it, from people who know what they're talking about. Thank you for your input. I have been doing this for a few years and have had my own small shops, I know the environment well. What got me is the auto thinking that just because a shop is big its quantity over quality. The one thing I know is industry standards and that applies to small, medium and large shops. If I could take back the 2500 times i spent hours working on something that the client 'even understand I would be driving that new Vette and retired. In my own harsh way I was just Trring to change the stereotype thinking and open up . Just because someone is small doesn't change the fact that the sky is the limit and there is money to be made(AS LONG AS THE PRESS IS SPINNING). I wish I knew someone like me when I was new in this businessI wish I knew someone like you when I was new in the business too! And I'll certainly grant you that the other side of small shops, especially new ones who want to shine at quality, is that sometimes you can get bogged down in saying YES to everything, or in making everything perfect for jobs that don't really get you anywhere down the road. I still struggle to figure what jobs a small shop (that wants to stay both small AND profitable) should & shouldn't be accepting.
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