[amayausers.com] Re: large orders

  • From: "K Nehmer" <nehmer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 9 Jul 2008 11:16:28 -0500

Rod, 

You have expressed one of the conondrums I've often thought about.  The 
numerous head contract embroiderer who sells designs at 25 to 50 cents per 
1000, has a lot more in equipment to pay for!--how do they do it?

Kathy

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Rod or Sharon 
  To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Wednesday, July 09, 2008 10:34 AM
  Subject: [amayausers.com] Re: large orders


  Michelle,

  It is all about volume and contract pricing. For the small business owner, it 
boils down to what you are willing to sacrifice and how little money you are 
willing to work for, for the time spent. As an example. If your design was, 
lets say, 5000 stitches, no thread breaks and no complications, sew time alone 
would be 5 min apiece at an average of 1000 stitches per minute. That is 500 
minutes= 8hrs 20 minutes. Now add in your time for ordering, receiving and 
unpacking, setting up the design and the machine,  hooping, unhooping, 
trimming, cost of your backing and bobbins all of your overhead etc, 
etc........figure all this out and see what your hourly wage would be  after 
all the overhead is subtracted......it may surprise you.....

  In short I often wonder how wonder how they can undercut the little guy so 
much because the big dogs still have all the setup, hooping,  trimming, etc, 
etc, etc, to do and the only time saved is in the actual sew time using 
multiple or multi-head machines, even for them..... they are willing to 
undercut and pick up the loss by just capturing the volume market.....

  Rod
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Michele Zimmer 
    To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Wednesday, July 09, 2008 8:27 AM
    Subject: [amayausers.com] large orders


    I have someone that called for a quote on 100 shirts.  I have only one 
machine and the design is just part of a column, like a cement pillar, and 
lettering, I told her I'd charge her $10 for the design set up because the 
column wasn't going to be that hard to digitize and off the top of my head, $4 
per shirt not having the slighted idea on how many stitches it would be.  She 
said my digitizing fee was better, but my embroidery price was higher, they 
quoted her 2.75 per shirt.  How do people do this?  And am I wrong in not 
saying I would do the same thing?  I'm actually thinking of calling her back 
and telling her the digitizing setup would be free and 3.25 per shirt.  

     

    What do you think.  I'd hate to lose out on 300.00, but that will be a lot 
more work for me because of only one machine and I'm sure the other company 
that quoted her had more.  

     

    Michele Zimmer

    Carefree Creations

    Michele@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    www.CarefreeCreations.com

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