woodbrains":xc2e7kmj said:
Tomahawk, I did take almost everything on when I had a workshop last time; I installed fitted kitchens, laid floors, did some house joinery and door hanging, picture framing, I made packing cases once! I thought this was part of my downfall, the diversity meant it was hard to get fully efficient at anything. I found it difficult to cost jobs too. Someone would come along with any woodwork related thing, but I had no datum for costing something I'd never done, so I was likely undercharging just to make the rent. Conventional wisdom would be to specialise in a narrow field and get efficient and streamlined to maximise costs. If it worked for you, then fine, I'll give it some more thought.
Mike.
Mike
I am not saying that all the jobs I have taken on made money, the trick is saying no the next time.
I first went into business when I was 21 and made ALL the same mistakes that you made, I got out after 9 years of struggling when I was offered a job as a works manager in a furniture company.
Older and wiser I set up again in 2005 and although with the problems caused be 2008 I have slowly grown the business to employ 6 people.
You have something in common with me that you have done it before and if you think about it, you should have an idea of what to avoid and what to take on that will make money, even if it is not what you may want to do.
You now have the pricing datum as you have been tried in the past.
I would say that you seem to be fixated with hand dovetails and drawer slips, this will not make you money, buy a dovetail jig and use a router.
Offer hand cut dovetails as an option, I think you will find that at at least £200 per drawer box ( 1 days work ) most customers will go for the routered option with a veneered MDF base.
I am not saying you won't be able to make high end hand made furniture, but have been in this industry long enough to know that these jobs are few and far between especially if you are not in the right bit of the country.
Most customers just want a nice looking piece which is a price they can afford and are not really interested if you have spent 3 weeks cutting all the joints by hand and scraping the surfaces with a cabinet scraper.
Finally my training as an apprentice was partly making high end reproductions, and I loved doing it, and if I thought I could make living at it I would jump at the chance even now.
I am enough of a realist to know that it is a very small market place and I would struggle to keep my head above water.