"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Seems about the same in Europe.We're based in Portugal and started seeing the effects before you did in the US. We had 16 employees, grew by 50% in the past 2 years and were expecting another big growth this year. Shut down came whilst we were assembling a new press (almost one month later and it's still not finished, the techs stopped coming). We are now down to 4 employees and even those are working part-time.It's been a couple weeks since we screen printed anything. It's scary!! We still get a few DTG and embroidery orders, but we're 80% down from last year. April/May are usually our best months so that percentage is bound to get to the 90% mark.Our main markets are tourism (gone), restaurants (gone) and events (gone). Most other businesses (retail) are also closed so we barely have any customers left.We've been making and selling masks, getting some orders through that.The government is not allowing us to fire people but we're able to get them through a lay off system where employees get 70% of their wages and we pay 30% of those 70%. It's not ideal but it could be a lot worse (some countries in Europe don't allow any kind of changes at all). Once that ends we're going to fire most of them. We're also getting loans at low interest rates.I expect things to get back to "normal" (not the usual normal of course) in august/september. We went almost bankrupt before the lay off system was announced but things are looking better now. Hopefully we'll survive this. It's scary seeing our labor of 14 years going down the drain in less than a month. Stay safe everyone.
Glad to hear some optimism. Only thing I have to my advantage right now is no employees. Otherwise it's looking pretty grim on my end. North NJ is in bad shape though so that could be the reason. Doubt schools open back up so that pretty much kills my most profitable season, but I'm sure that's the case for most of us. Probably going to end up seeking full time employment somewhere else and doing this as a side gig again until I can carve out a new niche to print for.
Glad some of you are getting back in the into it, as my state was one of the last to quarantine and I guess we will be the last to get back in the swing of things.
Web stores. Now is the time to dive in if haven't already. If you can sell even just 50 to 100 tees a day at retail pricing that can cover a lot of overhead if you are a small shop. If you don't have one find a niche now and work it