Thread: $$$$$$$ ?????
View Single Post
  #7  
Old 06-02-2014, 12:46 PM
Joel Stehr Joel Stehr is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Spokane, WA
Posts: 523
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tim McKnight View Post
For your first couple of builds, cover your cost of materials plus a small amount for labor [IF] you have the quality to command it??? We gave away about a dozen guitars before we felt we were ready to accept money for them. FWIW, our first sale was $550 in the early 90s which was about double the cost of materials.

1) Define your market.
2) Your initial comparison should be to Asain imports. Are your guitars equal to them or do them surpass them in terms of fit, finish, playability, tone and responsiveness.
3) If not then that should be your goal to provide a better product at [that price point].
4) If you can honestly say you have a better product than an Asian factory guitar then next compare yours to a Gibson, Martin or Taylor. Are you equal to or better than those?
5) If so, attend a few shows and YOU judge how YOUR guitars fit and finish compare to other exhibitors. Keep in mind that you can't jump in and expect to command top dollar as an unknown builder. Why would Joe player buy your product when he can buy a superior product at Guitar Center for a fraction of the cost.

Sorry to be blunt but that was the advice I was given 20+ years ago and it has served me well.

We raise our prices about every two years, typically after a show like HB.
Tim summed this up quite nicely. The first guitar I sold was for $450, and I was simply trying to sell it to buy materials for the next.

On the business side: In general, building your business slow and steady is the best way to go.
Reply With Quote