Not taking anything away from outsourcing, I still like my hand in the trade as the "sign maker." Much of my gear is old-school and so is really only meant for a lower volume trade, which at present I am okay with. (Ioline Classic-Vinyl/ Edge for die-cut/ HP for wide-format-Z 5xxx Series-Roland Rotary Engraver, etc.) I like designing something and printing it out. Perhaps it is being an old-school sign painter where we sold the job, stayed up all night painting and installed it in the morning. (yes, it really was like that.) Though I still hand-letter/ paint and love that part of the trade, its a tough sell unless the client specifically asks for it.
That being said, I still like "doing" the craft...like to see what I've designed, printed/ die-cut before I am ready to sell it to the customer; things look a lot different on a monitor than printed out; If nothing else, for dry run QC. Outsourcing is a way to go in lieu of a huge cash outlay for equipment that may not be supported in the coming years. This makes absolute sense. I feel sometimes like I am playing musical chairs with technology. Once the amount of business one is doing justifies it and one has decided to take the plunge, the best bet IMO so as not to be left holding the bag of obsolescence, is to "lease and upgrade."
Everyone has a story: Years ago I bought "used" a Roland CJ-500 with the understanding that it would be an easy conversion to Eco-Sol. Had I been on Signs 101 I could have found out that that solvents eat the old printer heads and my investment of $2500.00 was money thrown down the drain. A company called Better Banner did conversions and sold actual kits. ($800.00!!!) Lesson learned.