"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Same thing happened with the 1996 Olympics. We cranked shirts out night and day running only 2 shifts, it was 12 on 12 off for 2 weeks. We never got paid. About 36K in work.That hurt.
Are there very many other industries where price is dictated by the purchaser and not the vendor?WalMart and their price point Vlassic pickles comes to mind, but nothing else I can think of.BS if you ask me.
Big box stores in general. One of the reasons that many times, an almost identical model of television or lawnmower may not be.I heard a guy from Snapper years ago talking about how outfits like Walmart not only expect a lower price, but that that price must keep dropping on subsequent contracted orders!The Snapper guy was saying that they had to stop being a vendor because they didn't want to put their name on the product as it had more and more corners cut to be able to still make a profit.
It's ridiculous in reality. They want what we do, but they aren't willing to pay for it. Or pay us anyways.They'll pay the hell out of some freight though.
Quote from: ebscreen on November 12, 2012, 06:56:28 PMIt's ridiculous in reality. They want what we do, but they aren't willing to pay for it. Or pay us anyways.They'll pay the hell out of some freight though.Perhaps it's that 1% corporate mentality. Sharing the wealth with Frog Prints or East Bay Screen is not in the cards as it is with shuffling money between big boys like Disney and UPS or Nike and Fed Ex or other similar big buck buddies.I have worked in shops that were so starry eyed to get a contract with a perceived prestigious client, that they didn't even do their homework to see that they weren't even making any money! It took the boss' accountant to eventually point it out.