Author Topic: Pricing your work.... :+}  (Read 1763 times)

Offline Danny

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Pricing your work.... :+}
« on: April 13, 2012, 05:16:11 pm »
Scrollsaw Goodies put this article out which I feel is good information for anyone that is thinking about selling their crafts.  Danny  :+}

 Pricing Your Work

Your walls are covered and your shelves are overflowing with your scroll saw projects. Then it finally dawns on you?maybe you should start selling your work. But what should you charge? This is a tough question to answer. After all, you want to make it affordable so people would actually buy your products. But at the same time, you don?t want to short change yourself. While pricing structures can range from picking a number out of the air to complex formulas, here?s a good way to come up with a price for your scroll sawn art.

First, you must decide what your time is worth to you. Are you happy making $15/hr? $30/hr? Be sure to keep this figure realistic. While it would be nice to make $150/hr, chances are that my work isn?t worth more than $15/hr. Once you come up with a number, this becomes your target income goal.

Next, figure out what it would cost to make your product. Figure in your time and material cost. Material costs not only includes the materials used to make your product, but it also includes expendables like scroll saw blades, masking tape, paper, and printer ink. Figuring out the costs of your expendables might be a bit of a guessing game, but try to put a ballpark figure on it. While you?re at it mark up the material costs by about 20%. After all, you still have to hoof it over to the lumber store, pick your stock, haul it back home and organize it.

Don?t overlook expenses that occur in the sales process. Are you going to craft shows? Chances are, you?ll be spending all day trying to sell your wares. Be sure to compensate yourself for your time. Plus there?s booth fees and travel expenses to figure in too. Online markets charge listing fees and take a sales commission. Plus any time that you spend listing your products. See where I?m going with this?

Now its time to figure out what price to charge for you product. So take your time multiplied by your target income goal plus material costs. This is your price. But wait. We?re not quite done yet. Now that we have a price, we have to figure out if the market can bare that price.

When you come up with a number, compare it to what others sell similar items for locally. If others are selling it for more, raise your prices. If they?re selling it for less, decide if you?d be willing to take less. If not, see if you can reduce your time or cost to get the widget price closer to the market price. There are many times where it just isn?t worth your time to make that particular product. But there are many other items that you can make that has a nice profit margin. You may also concider the law of averages. Perhaps one product has to sell below what you?d be willing to take, but another product is selling for more. These two products may balance each other out in the long run.

 

Naturally custom work will cost more than items that can be ?mass produced.? Making several of one item is usually more time efficient than making them one at a time. If you do portrait style cuttings, be sure to stack cut your items so you get 3 or 4 copies. Other items, make jigs where possible to speed up production. Also keep an eye out on how to reduce material costs and any expendables. Often little compromises result in huge savings, thereby increasing your profit margin.

And lastly, know who your customer is. Flea market folks won?t pay $35 for a free standing puzzle, but a patron of an art museum would. Be sure to research your customers and what others are doing. Find someone who is doing well and copy them (their method, not their patterns). No need to re-invent the wheel.

Hopefully these tips will get you on your way to selling your wares. Its nice to earn a little extra money to keep yourself in sawblades and buy a new tool on occasion. But if you don?t sell anything, don?t worry. After all, its the journey, not the destination that counts.  ?by Travis Cook
Danny  :+}

Offline Al W

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Re: Pricing your work.... :+}
« Reply #1 on: April 13, 2012, 05:22:40 pm »
Interesting and informative read.  Thank you for posting this one.
Molon Labe

Believe half of what you see, and none of what you hear.

The government is NOT always right, or on your side.

UHMNL

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Re: Pricing your work.... :+}
« Reply #2 on: April 13, 2012, 08:14:48 pm »
Going to crafts shows it was real easy to set a price. If it was selling real fast; the price was too low.
If it would not sell the price was too high.
You can not make a living scrollsawing. I made enough to pay for material and travel expenses.
With money left over I up-graded my tools in the shop.
It was a hobby for me.
FD Mike

Offline Keefie

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Re: Pricing your work.... :+}
« Reply #3 on: April 14, 2012, 11:31:46 am »
I agree with Mike, You can't make a living scrollsawing, but if you can sell enough to cover the costs of materials and table costs at craft fairs and still have a little left over to buy tools etc then you are doing well.
It's all a case of "Mind over Matter",  The Government don't Mind, and I don't Matter.

Offline jimbo

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Re: Pricing your work.... :+}
« Reply #4 on: April 14, 2012, 10:00:55 pm »
You got it Mike, I make a few $$ only because I get my wood for nothing, $$ per hour would be well under award rates, I give my wife money for helping me at fairs and what is left goes for the cost of the site and me but as Mike says it woild be hard to make a living out of it
Jimbo

tux_linux

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Re: Pricing your work.... :+}
« Reply #5 on: April 17, 2012, 06:09:59 am »
to get an overview on expendables:

make a table with one column for "expenses" and one for "earnings". Now collect all the bills that you get, each one needs to be added to the list under "expenses". Also write down every time you sell some in "earnings".

This way you can easily control each month what you have spend and what you did earn. I actually have several tables where I have my financial control.
I can tell how much I earned a month, a year and so on.
I can compare how an advertising turned out compared to times when I do not advertise.

I have to do this as a "net income overview" for the annual tax computation because of my hobby business anyway and it helps me to control my finances.

ShadowB6

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Re: Pricing your work.... :+}
« Reply #6 on: April 17, 2012, 11:02:29 am »
An interesting thread indeed, thanks for sharing the article. I'll never get what I think I'm worth per hour, but then my wife says I don't charge enough. I have done some pieces though where the customer has thrown in a nice tip. I guess this tells me I'm selling myself short.

Offline Jim Finn

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Re: Pricing your work.... :+}
« Reply #7 on: April 19, 2012, 06:42:59 pm »
All this math....and computations  come down to.... "what will the market bear?" That is ALL that matters.  Figure this out,  and you will find what your efforts are actually worth. Not the other way around.
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Offline GrayBeard

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Re: Pricing your work.... :+}
« Reply #8 on: April 19, 2012, 06:56:20 pm »
Very simple way to find out what the market will bear is to go to several Craft Shows in your market area and walk around and LOOK at the products and what they are charging for them.
You will soon realize, "It ain't worth the damn hassle!"

We have an association of "Artists" in our fair community and they will not even allow you to SHOW anything in their exhibitions unless it is TOTALLY made by you...To even display any of my stuff I would have to give a written guarantee that the object was cut from a pattern or design that I personally made and not from something that another provided me.

They will however rent me a space in their gallery to display my works but not for sale. The potential buyer would have to see the item, call me, meet me there and do the exchange that way. They won't even handle the transaction for a commission.
Their contention that we are Craft People and not  Artists!

BUT they allow PHOTOGRAPHS to be entered that were only TAKEN by the photographer and not necessarily processed by them. Their claim is that the photographer possessed the 'creativity' to shoot the picture but not the technical skills to process the film or make the prints.
B.S.  Do not get involved with Artistes!!!!

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