If you are selling directly to my customer base - then you have made yourself a competitor instead of a vendor. There's a local screen printing shop that we used to use - they decided to sell direct to end users at the same prices (or just marginally higher) than we could get products for. We quit using them.
I understand needing to add services to stay competitive, but selling to end users when you claim to be a wholesale or trade only shop is a slap in the face.
Absolutely true...they as a vendor need to weigh the loss of your business as a buyer of raw materials vs what they gain by selling direct....most of them realize that they are lazy salesman and not passionate
sign makers and their scheme to sell direct falls short of expectation. They've now lost your business and taken on the headaches of actually making signage. I'm not seeing Grimco hustling carved
signs and brand systems, but if you want a mediocre stop
sign at a cheap price to arrive tomorrow then they are your people. I don't like making road
signs and so I outsource them, even though I could make them in house at a comparable or slightly better margin....but why lose time on a non-interesting low profit job when I could outsource it and direct my time towards better work...."better" defined as overall higher profit and more interesting/fun/creative to produce. Further, selling road
signs doesn't really reciprocate future work or word of mouth advertising....but a sexy brand system or road side
sign will turn heads and reciprocate more work of it's kind. I always laugh because my company literally does not pay to advertise (haha
sign shop that doesn't advertise, ironic) but the word of mouth is HUGE, we are turning down work on the regular. I make it a point to ask people how they ended up at my door and 95% of the time it's a reference from another client. So I say let the big boys get a taste of what we real
sign makers do everyday, and then let your point be made on it's own while you wait on the sidelines laughing and looking like a hero when the customer inevitably gets a poor product and has to buy it from a real professional anyway...at which point I'm in the dominant position and can charge whatever I want (within reason of course). My low rate competitors are my best sales tool....