Now that pricing is my responsibility, I want to make sure we are making a profit.
So does the owner.
We are a small storefront vinyl shop in the business district. We don't have the expertise, tools or time to do many of our installations.
On our bigger installations we hire an outside contractor. What is the right mark-up on their work? Previous manager didn't mark-up labor at all or just minimally.
What about the sale of sub-contracted items like screenprinting or cut-out letters? My feeling is that the mark-up should be 40% plus shipping. Any thoughts?
Any advice is appreciated. Thanks
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Beth Daniel
Murfreesboro, TN
GO TITANS!
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FranCisco Vargas
aka: Cisco
aka:Traveling Millennium Sign Artist
http://www.franciscovargas.com
Fresno, CA 93703
559 252-0935
"to live life, is to love life, a sign of no life, is a sign of no love"...Cisco 12'98
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PKing is
Pat King of
King Sign Design in
McCalla,Alabama
The Professor of
SIGNOLOGY
I think a 40% mark-up is a good rule of thumb for subcontractors. Sometimes I mark up less. I can't seem to make a lot off electricians or back hoe people, or the ready mix guy.
On the other hand, I doubled the price of screen printing here for a long time. Actually, I just priced it for what I thought it was worth and then had somebody else do it. I had two different places that did the work for about half what I got for it.
With plastic letters, the price they give you represents a thirty or forty percent discount off list. If you're working off a 40% discount, you need to multiply by 1.67 to get back to list, in other words a 67% mark-up.
Something else to remember. You are the contractor responsible if a subcontractor fouls up. If he is not insured, for example, a damage claim could probably come back on you. So don't play 'general contractor' for peanuts.
Good luck,
Brad in Arkansas
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Brad Ferguson
4782 West Highway 22
Paris AR 72855
501-963-2642
signbrad@cswnet.com