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Signs 365 What's your mark up?

dynaminator

New Member
I've just started using signs 365. I have a client that is a company with their own design dept. They sent me print ready artwork for 5 48" x 96" banners. My s365 order with shipping cost me $210 and I charged the $475 so that's 126% mark up. Now they are sending me one offs. Just curious how you all think about pricing in these scenarios?
 

visual800

Active Member
dont you hate it when people do this crap! well you are still making good money one offs if they are a good client i would leave it alone....if they are a pita i would raise it
 

unclebun

Active Member
I don't know why you would be upset at someone wanting a single banner. It's a banner you're selling them that requires minimal investment of time.

I sell banners at the same price whether I print them or I have S365 print them. Which is nearly 5 times their square foot cost. If you're only adding 127% to the cost you're leaving a lot of money on the table.
 

Decent Digitizing

Premium Subscriber
You're doing great with that markup — 126% on a bulk order is solid. When it comes to one-off jobs, though, the key is to factor in your time, risk, and handling costs.
Here’s how I usually handle it
1) I set a flat minimum profit I need to make (e.g., $50–$75), even for small runs.
2) Even if the file is print-ready, you’re still doing order processing, proofing, and logistics.
3) I usually mark up the shipping too, or at least bundle it into a flat rate.
4) Since they have a design department, they understand value — just be transparent and professional about your costs.

One-offs shouldn’t bring your margin down too much — you’re not just selling print, you’re selling service, reliability, and speed.
 

jimbug72

New Member
We charge the same rate as if we did it in house using our HP315 even though on bulk orders S365 can be much lower cost after materials/labor. That way, if for some reason or another we have to run a bulk order in house we don't lose $ and customer isn't mad because we have to charge more for that job. If it's something we can't do in house, we mark up 100-300% depending on the job/customer. This pricing is of course separate from any design fees.
 

dynaminator

New Member
I don't know why you would be upset at someone wanting a single banner. It's a banner you're selling them that requires minimal investment of time.

I sell banners at the same price whether I print them or I have S365 print them. Which is nearly 5 times their square foot cost. If you're only adding 127% to the cost you're leaving a lot of money on the table.
Ya, I don't like leaving money on the table! I guess my markup was actually 226% not 126%. So this last one off they sent was a 48" x 96" single sided 13 oz banner. My cost with shipping from s365 was $50. You would charge about $250 then? I haven't billed them yet. I hope I didn't shoot myself in the foot by not charging enough on that first order.
 

unclebun

Active Member
I am not including shipping when I say nearly 5 times. I am comparing their square foot price ($1.25) to mine. I sell a 4x8 banner for $192.

If you do a 226% price including shipping, you're getting $3.50/sq ft. We were charging that 20 years ago when gas was cheap and rent was half what we pay now.
 

JBurton

Signtologist
I hope I didn't shoot myself in the foot by not charging enough on that first order.
Nope, when they come back with why is this so much more, be it on a repeat order or one off, you can let them know that the setup and finishing costs are associated with one or five, quantity saves cash. If it's the same size order, mark it where you want it, then let them know you fumbled pricing on their first project, but since it was in their favor, you didn't see any reason to inform them.
My banner pricing scheme is every time I hit print, $50, every individual banner I have to trim and grommet, $50 (this can go up if it's a 20' long banner or they want grommets ever 6"), then take the square footage of material consumed, times the cost, times my 2.5 markup, add them together and boom. This is assuming they have their design ready to go and don't need a sample print, they haven't wasted my time with 20 emails, and assuming it doesn't 'look' too cheap to me.
I tend to make way more money if I can sell them a 2" tube frame with installation.
 

kcollinsdesign

Old member
I charge $160 for a 4' x 8' banner (13oz. vinyl with hems and grommets). Art and installation are charged at our regular shop rate (usually around $85/hour; more if aerial equipment is involved).

The typical banner customer will take one look at my price, and 70% of them will decide to buy their banner from an internet seller (around $100 with shipping for a 4' x 8'). The clients that stay with me are experienced buyers and regular clients that understand the value we bring to the table.

Note 1: Many people who buy their banners and signs from internet suppliers will come around and ask us to install them. We charge our regular rates, and add 20%.

Note 2: If banners are part of a larger project, I will sell them for about the same price as the internet companies (my cost plus shipping with a 40% profit margin). Of course, I stopped printing in house years ago. Why would I when I can buy banners from a reliable, high-quality wholesale supplier for $1.25/.sq. ft. and not have to keep and maintain expensive equipment, inventory, and pay people to make them?
 
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