The Only Pricing Formula You’ll Ever Need!

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Cutting It Close

Cutting It Close

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 303
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Ай бұрын
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@arthurtam9714
@arthurtam9714 Жыл бұрын
This is probably the only video on breaking down pricing woodworking project I had ever watched and made accounting sense. Thanks for sharing your hardworking pricing model. I truly appreciate it!
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@ryanschultz6633
@ryanschultz6633 Жыл бұрын
One of the best, most accurate, most honest videos to the business side of this industry. Well done.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@TomKaren94
@TomKaren94 Жыл бұрын
One of the undergraduate classes I teach is Managerial Accounting. I am going to assign watching this video to my students. While there are some things I would say differently, on the whole this is very informative and helpful. One thing people need to know is that being a skilled woodworker and running a woodworking business are two completely different animals. The skills needed to run the business will not be developed in the shop. Thanks for posting a very practical set of information.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@biglar155
@biglar155 Жыл бұрын
In a world of rambling explanations and "magic" results, you've cut through the clutter and given an excellent explanation using facts and math. As an old friend used to say "If you can't put a number on it, it's B.S." Great Job!
@robvanscheijndel
@robvanscheijndel Жыл бұрын
Every product has a perceived value. If $40 is accepted by customers and the production cost of the product is $20, then it's not a problem. The margin is then 100%. This sounds like a lot, but it is necessary to cover growth, innovation, unsold products and ultimately net profit. Running a business requires taking significant risks and investing time and money. The net profit should cover this and is the reward for it all.
@ssu7653
@ssu7653 Жыл бұрын
Also need to cover possible recalls or warranty issues, not cheap if there is a problem you didnt find before shipping
@Itslvle
@Itslvle Жыл бұрын
My favorite video you've made so far. If people want to sell stuff and actually make a living from it, this stuff is vital. Hoping and "working hard" isn't good enough. Double your cost is quite common and sensible if you're selling it on your own (assuming the market is willing to pay, but if it isn't, you should really look for another product to sell). If your item is sold in large chains around the country/world, your costs need to be about 10% of what the end user pays at the store as there are so many middle men that take their cut. But really in the end the price is what the market will bear. If you can't sell for more than 4% of breaking even, no amount of sweat or tears will make the same product sell more (yes, marketing etc but you get the idea). But if you're really lucky and you can sell a 10 dollar cost per product for 457 dollars then you're most likely going to do that. Not saying it's fair, but that's just what tends to happen, especially with posh brands that have an image where if they sell you garbage with their logo on it, people will throw 10k at it. I literally yesterday heard Dior is selling an old Finnish summer party game called Mölkky at 1000 euros when you can get that same wooden block game at 10 euros. But chances are, you're not a hot big name brand that's worth over a billion dollars so double your costs per unit is a reasonable goal so you can keep growing your business. 2% profit will take a long time to pay for that 100k CNC you're eyeing.
@MissMala
@MissMala Жыл бұрын
I’m basically a hobbyist that makes a few bucks here and there. This is the best advice I have heard about pricing your product. 👍
@fotograffiti22
@fotograffiti22 Жыл бұрын
This is incredible helpful. Thank you for your transparency and willingness to teach others.
@MisterDivineAdVenture
@MisterDivineAdVenture Жыл бұрын
Man, little bro- thanks so much for letting us all into your shop, head, life, and beezwax! That was so helpful to so many - this will get to viral. Oh and very well done. (But skip the light color markers.)
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Realized it after we filmed that the markers were light and I couldn’t get a another take in time. Thanks for the comment, much appreciated!!
@RathaSochenda
@RathaSochenda Жыл бұрын
Best explanation on KZbin on price breakdown for a tangible product. Appreciate you taking the time to share this with us. Helps you know if your breaking even (wasting time) or being profitable. At the end the day its all about growth and creating new opportunities. Keep cutting it CLOSE! lol
@ricci8497
@ricci8497 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant breakdown of how to cost things and remembering that your own time isn't free when starting off on your own loved your formula's no nonsense nice and simply put and transferable to any business or venture.
@jonm189
@jonm189 Жыл бұрын
It always amazes me how wise you are for such a young man and how easy you make it all sound - keep doing what you do!!!
@reenactorrob7901
@reenactorrob7901 Жыл бұрын
Of all the videos I watch, this is the first channel that I have subscribed to. Information I need and understand, you don't bore us with unneeded mundane details and you keep the video moving. I will check out the other vids as I go along. If you haven't done it already, keeping production aligned with documentation and coordination of shipping labeling etc.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
I appreciate that!
@ryankoch8849
@ryankoch8849 Жыл бұрын
Good video, great breakdown of costs. Seen a lot of these lately and yours was definitely one of the better ones particularly with how you approach costs most people don't consider. I actually tried your formula and it wasn't far off from the costing calculations I do(mine was a tad higher for sale price) but for anyone looking to not loose their shirt your formula is aces. Keep up the good work!
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed!
@x-Gingerbeard-x
@x-Gingerbeard-x Жыл бұрын
This is a great video! I'm just starting out, so knowing what I'm getting myself into and how to price things is hugely helpful! Thank you so much for your clear explanation!
@AllBlast
@AllBlast Жыл бұрын
Wow, that was one of the most real videos i have seen in a long time!! Actually does what it says on the tin and not taking you off to a website to download another pile of bs before you get even close to what you are looking for!! Very good video and very helpful to a lot of people 🤙👍
@RogueIslander401
@RogueIslander401 Жыл бұрын
I subscribed, because of the value added in the video. Thank you! The breakdown was really interesting, informative, and overall eye opening.
@russmarchand3962
@russmarchand3962 Жыл бұрын
I am that hobby woodworker that you speak of. Mostly I make gifts for friends and family. Stainless steel coffee mugs, cutting boards, walking sticks and canes for veterans... I am also a retired postal employee so time is on my side. (Apologies to the Stones). Your videos are inspiring so I just subscribed. Keep it up. Oh, and thanks.
@jaypabon2045
@jaypabon2045 Жыл бұрын
Once again!.. so much valuable information! Broken down in the "real".. I appreciate you.
@brianwade8481
@brianwade8481 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the informative videos as they are always educational. I haves a small woodworking business and the videos will definitely give me the knowledge that will help make my business successful.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
That’s great to hear! Is there any topics you would like me to cover in the future?
@GeekRedux
@GeekRedux Жыл бұрын
Most the answers indicate the employees don't understand the price analysis themselves since they were mostly just listing factors you already accounted for in the $20 cost. "Profit"guy was right on. Also, setting price = double the cost is called keystoning and it's a pretty common way to do it.
@forafreeamerica767
@forafreeamerica767 Жыл бұрын
A business man told me when I was a teenager, " if you can't double your money on it, it's probably not worth it "
@matthewshannon6946
@matthewshannon6946 6 ай бұрын
​@@forafreeamerica767I got the same advice from a mentor in the cabinet shop!
@yasinkolgu
@yasinkolgu 5 ай бұрын
It is really great how you are honest about your own prices and giving these financial advices for free. May Allah straighten your path
@larryniidji
@larryniidji Жыл бұрын
Great information! Break even did leave out yours and probably others countless hours of planning, strategy, design, packaging, getting best pricing and so much more. My brothers and I spent countless hours on our box for packaging and even more on instructions. Like your employees, most will never image the hours behind just coming up with a product let alone manufacture and sales. BTW! I saved this for later, repeated, access at home.
@danperlea5034
@danperlea5034 Жыл бұрын
I will say, I was expecting (don’t ask me why) a very bad video on calculating this stuff. I’m actually impressed and think you did a really great job explaining this and calculating your costs. Very well done!
@jojo-yo1sk
@jojo-yo1sk 9 күн бұрын
I am a wood worker in Indonesia,,,n happy to learn that you are making a good and flourishing business..other than cnc we have laser engraving and metal etching to compliment our work...your pricing theory will not work for us..its the market that we need to pay attention and how much people are willing to pay for a certain job. you are making much more than us...and we are happy about it...and its a good educational video
@morefiction3264
@morefiction3264 Жыл бұрын
A little small business class applicable to nearly every business. Although the reason that thing was worth $40 is that people were willing to pay $40 for it. Ultimately it's the consumer that sets the price as you illustrated towards the end when you ran through your tests with pricing at different levels.
@j.h.4570
@j.h.4570 Жыл бұрын
No, not in each and every case the price ultimately gets set by the consumer. Monopolies work a bit differently, in that case the seller can set the price - at least up to a certain point. But basically you're right of course.
@morefiction3264
@morefiction3264 Жыл бұрын
​@@j.h.4570 Even in a monopoly people have alternate uses for their resources and alternate ways to solve a problem.
@dukujohnmoses2889
@dukujohnmoses2889 Жыл бұрын
Actually when it comes to pricing I had two things in mind labour and machine cost but today you have just given me a pro tip. And as matter fact I don’t have a CNC yet coz I can’t afford it and it’s been three years now since I got know the CNC world, and I said men this is it and I meant it I never stoped you and many others and I know am gonna make it thanks to you Cutting it close, your story is amazing and it has always left me with no choice but to keep pushing till the day I buy a CNC machine.
@craigwilton6264
@craigwilton6264 Жыл бұрын
New subscriber here, this video was very insiteful as ive just started my own woodworking business with a recently aquired CNC. I found all of the contigencies very helpful and something i hadnt considered before. Keep up the good work mate, very inspiring 😊
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Thank you for subscribing! is there anything else you would like to see?
@rb67mustang
@rb67mustang Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your formula, I appreciate it.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
My pleasure!
@andrewswehla1694
@andrewswehla1694 Жыл бұрын
I found that really insightful. Thank you for sharing!! Keep up the good work!
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@harryniedecken5321
@harryniedecken5321 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your vieo series. I might be wrong but I think that you might be under estimating your labor and overhead costs. As a practical matter, your wages are about half of what they need to be.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Your welcome and the cost was just an example of labor cost, not what is actually paid out.
@page76metalcraft19
@page76metalcraft19 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video! Your formula, ideas and advice can be applied towards any business including mine. Thank you sir.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Very welcome!
@Technoanima
@Technoanima Жыл бұрын
I would love to have a video how you motivate yourself and the staff. Seen so many businesses get burn out and lose their company to shareholder control
@WayneLacognata
@WayneLacognata Жыл бұрын
Hi, enjoyed the video, very informative. Just wanted to check with you about the numbers you put up on the screen. They appear to show that for that $2.8 mil you had to charge $68 a piece for them, not the $40 you posted, did I miss something in your numbers. Loved the video though.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
So we did the 2.8 million and our average charge was $40 per product, some were engraved, some were not and we did over 50,000 of them, some were made in the larger shop so I did not include those numbers in the documentary because I didn’t really do them out of the small shop, it was at the larger shop.
@pi3ladbd417
@pi3ladbd417 Жыл бұрын
Bin looking for a cnc machine to work from home and after watching you you have given me the kick up the ass to start my new business and given up landscaping, then I can look at my so called brother inlaw and look at him like shit like he does to me ,he's got money and he thinks he can run all over me but not now I'll have the last laugh, thanks again you deserve to be were you are through working hard ,respect from uk
@FrazerCanyonWoodworks
@FrazerCanyonWoodworks Жыл бұрын
How do you guesstimate what a future replacement machine might cost? Is there a general percentage increase you would use?
@richardhingle3634
@richardhingle3634 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I'm wondering the same thing
@butchlandry1266
@butchlandry1266 Жыл бұрын
Do you always calculate per single item for cost? Seems your size Company wold base off cost / 1000. Or a multiple of your choosing.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Let me know what other videos or topics you would like us to cover for you!
@michealgill9037
@michealgill9037 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video, I'm starting my own small woodworking business in Ireland, using recycled wood and my DIY CNC. Personally id love to see the marketing side such as making the etsy ad and that sort of thing.
@Sammzor
@Sammzor Жыл бұрын
Any advice you have for tracking all these numbers? Especially costs that change and shift like overhead and the different price points you were trying, and the factors that can change costs. And anything you've found to be helpful in decision making after you've tracked the numbers. Maybe too nitty gritty for a video but I'm a bit lost about making a comprehensible history of costs and sales that can be useful for growth.
@nathanbucholtz5226
@nathanbucholtz5226 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for being so transparent. You're a great source of both education and inspiration. Would love to see you do a video on what goes into shop maintenance and especially curious about material waste. What do you do with all of your wood scraps and sawdust. You must produce a ton of sawdust. Where does it all go!?!
@benjiandmckenzie8269
@benjiandmckenzie8269 Жыл бұрын
Hey Dude! Love these videos. I think a major problem in the wood working community is marketing. A lot of the older dudes (also younger dudes) have a lot of good stuff to sell, but they give up because they don't know how to brand or market themselves. Would love to see a video on marketing wood working products!
@brianserrao2331
@brianserrao2331 Жыл бұрын
Would it be possible to make a video where you calculate the breakeven cost for an item that is a "one off" for a customer? When you made your first Man Stand, did you utilize this very same formula, or did you have a different approach to calculating the break-even cost back then?
@brianserrao2331
@brianserrao2331 Жыл бұрын
Great instruction and breakdown of the different costs associated with the production of an item. My only concern with this formula is that it is more tailored towards when you are producing an item or product on a regular basis, and in a large quantity. What if you are a small shop owner who makes a variety of items...signs, serving trays, plaques, tables, etc., and these are not made every month on a consistent basis? It will be a little difficult to calculate a price for these different items based on your formula. Reason being that the items made in a small workshop are "one off" items as such and are not being produced every month in large or a stipulated amount. Other than that, as I said earlier GREAT video, and I always look at what you are directing your time at as it has always been very helpful and insightful.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the comment! My question back to that point is how do you know what you should charge for that item? All you have to really do is put this formula in a spreadsheet and take times when you work on that project, stick it in the formula and then you’ll have your breakeven. So if you make a sign and use a 2 board foot of maple, use the CNC for 20 minutes and it consumed 60 minutes of your time to make it, you should be able to quickly get that breakeven. And if you have a small shop, maybe you only do a couple bucks for overhead on every project you make. It should work for smaller shops, but you are correct, it works better for larger shops, but getting the correct times is extremely hard for larger shops.
@brianserrao2331
@brianserrao2331 Жыл бұрын
@@cutting-it-close thanks for your reply. I already utilise a formula, and it seems to work pretty good. What I’ll do is to set yours out in a spread sheet and compare one formula to the other utilising the same measurements, time, etc., and see what the outcome is. Never the less, yours was a much better in-depth look at how to price your item than the one I have.
@mrscience1409
@mrscience1409 Жыл бұрын
" What if you are a small shop owner who makes a variety of items...signs, serving trays, plaques, tables, etc., and these are not made every month on a consistent basis?" If you are this guy, then you don't need a formula. These are common items. You need just go to a store or google and see what everyone else charges. That's the best you can do. Then run the formula to see if it pencils out. Can you make money? you can try to make your product stand out. That's called "value adding". Personalization, unique patterns or wood, even promoting yourself as an artist. They are then buying a piece of you. You are not "selling" your work at the craft fair. You are "displaying" your work at a gallery. You don't have a "woodshop". You have a "studio". Create a back story about your ancestor Johnny Appleseed and how your stuff has bits of those very apple trees.
@NimrodTargaryen
@NimrodTargaryen Жыл бұрын
Wonderful explanation, ❤ thank you much. FYI in time 6:45 whiteboard has written “Future Value” ... I like your oral description “Replacement Value” better.
@TTC1940
@TTC1940 Жыл бұрын
Great video!! Do you markup the box to ship as well as the actual shipping cost? What about the labor to box and label?
@j.h.4570
@j.h.4570 Жыл бұрын
Depending on how exact you want to calculate, you will also include those. Otherwise it reduces your margin. Actually you even do the same when calculating material costs that go into your product. Those should include shipping, handling etc that you had to pay when buying the material. There's even a special term for that, it's called procurement costs.
@TTC1940
@TTC1940 Жыл бұрын
thanks for the advice@@j.h.4570
@ABNestor
@ABNestor Жыл бұрын
So how/where do you account for marketing costs? And do you break that down between brand marketing and product marketing? Or do you not even have those expenses?
@testingperson8413
@testingperson8413 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for giving and explaining details.
@ScottPurcell
@ScottPurcell Жыл бұрын
Excellent video. On the question of why you can charge 2x break-even, I think the best reason is the years of skills acquisition (on your part and your team) that let's you make it at that price. I sure wouldn't be able to do that! My field is IT technical training and when I look at the cost of the training I've delivered through the years, it seems astonishing to me. But my students get the benefit of my nearly 30 years of expanding knowledge in the industry.
@MrIsaacpr7
@MrIsaacpr7 Жыл бұрын
To expand on your topic, what business accounting solutions do you use to keep track of all the expenses and earnings? I love your business model and I’m interested in what the most cost effective accounting system would be for a business similar to yours.
@stephengould9385
@stephengould9385 5 ай бұрын
This was well done -- thank-you for your time
@AlCalvo
@AlCalvo Жыл бұрын
Where can I learn about this topic more in depth?
@edvarvi
@edvarvi Жыл бұрын
One word describes the video. EXCELLENT!
@mkkd85
@mkkd85 Жыл бұрын
Very simple and useful, thanks.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
@MaintDocs
@MaintDocs Жыл бұрын
I can remember making a really cool item with my cnc machine, but it required a lot of hand work afterwards to complete it. I tried selling it on etsy and after quite some time, found that people just weren't looking to spend enough to make it worth my time. As a bit of an artist, that was a blow, because it really was cool. People gave lots of compliments. But that is the reality of business. I had probably over 100 ideas that friends gave. (free ideas is not a bad thing, so be careful about discouraging this). But what broke most of the "i wish something like this existed" ideas was asking "if it existed, how much would _you_ pay for it?" Most of the ideas cost 2-3x to make vs what they'd be willing to buy them for.
@codacreator6162
@codacreator6162 Жыл бұрын
I learned some of this the hard way: I charged only for materials on my first few jobs, just because I didn’t have a ton of confidence in my skills. I sold all my stuff (desks, noodle boards, blanket ladders, and the like) which should have been a clue that I was doing something right, and ended up short of my next project. Stupid me.
@GlennHamblin
@GlennHamblin 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the helpful video. As far as being lucky goes I believe that luck is simply being prepared for the opportunity when it arrives. Congratulations on your success and thanks again.
@simonchambers3900
@simonchambers3900 11 ай бұрын
Hi, how and where do you sell. Do you have a website. How do you test what will sell. Do you separate the different things you sell or sell all from one site? My problem atm is sales.
@RobSandstromDesigns
@RobSandstromDesigns Жыл бұрын
Another good primer there, Ryan
@HammondFirewood
@HammondFirewood Жыл бұрын
What software does your company use to quote and invoice your customers?
@markp6062
@markp6062 Жыл бұрын
Very good information! Thanks for sharing!
@ProjectBretto
@ProjectBretto Жыл бұрын
Legend. This is great content! Thank you for sharing
@MyLifecraft
@MyLifecraft Жыл бұрын
thanks for sharing this with us man. But I'm a bit confused on how the slack time works. Say for example an employee works for 7 hours, 7x0.25=1.75 hours which doesn't sound right? So, for 7 hours of work, slack time actually makes it 1.75 hours that employee has worked?
@generaldave7455
@generaldave7455 Жыл бұрын
I do believe he means to add that slack time. 7*1.25=8.75 hours. So if an employee works for 7 hours on said unit, he is accounting for 8.75 hours.
@bflo5210
@bflo5210 Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure why this came up on my feed, but its a great video!
@TheNyhm1
@TheNyhm1 Жыл бұрын
Great info. How do you find employees that will accept $14.00hr?
@TheNyhm1
@TheNyhm1 Жыл бұрын
This is a serious question. No disrespect intended.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
So I live out in the country, I do not have a big city market to compete with me and I’m in southern Texas, a $14 an hour job is an above average hourly rate in my area. It’s not a extremely difficult job either, so we don’t have a ton of turnover, plus we are growing so people move up quickly within the company if they put their best foot forward! Thank you for the question
@AbudabuBobbi
@AbudabuBobbi Жыл бұрын
Its 12 not 14 now he's losing track of his bs.
@Ben-nt4rk
@Ben-nt4rk 3 ай бұрын
Thank you,,! a very helpful video...Ben from Tijuana Mexico
@WeekendWoodworker7
@WeekendWoodworker7 Ай бұрын
Dude this video is awesome! Separates the wheat from the chaff
@mikegay8612
@mikegay8612 Жыл бұрын
Extremely useful. Thank you.
@MrR409a
@MrR409a Жыл бұрын
Great presentation. Thx for posting it.
@jonathanschmidt4985
@jonathanschmidt4985 Жыл бұрын
Hey Dude, Just watched your videos on your startup, what sells, what doesn't, and this one. You seem like a pretty switched on young fella, and my take from this is I should make coasters (just kidding) bet your heart just sank for a second. I play around in the shed just for fun but your story is so cool hope other people who want to do something, whether with wood or any business see this. Best of luck to you and your employees, doing a great job, now have to see what all the guff was about with those coolers you kept dropping hints about, really who makes a KZbin video and puts in there own commercials.
@margan59
@margan59 Жыл бұрын
This video was very helpful. Thanks
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
@josephdestaubin7426
@josephdestaubin7426 Жыл бұрын
Overhead should be devided dollars of income rather than units of product. This creates a factor that you then multiply buy a specific product cost. The net result of this factorization is that you have a percentage anchor to the value of the product.
@mommabumble
@mommabumble Жыл бұрын
How often should you calculate this? Yearly? With each materials purchase?
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
It depends, it’s whenever prices of whatever variable within the formula changes enough up or down for you to check to make sure your breakeven is still accurate enough to make a good profit:)
@Sharkdog11b
@Sharkdog11b Жыл бұрын
This is very helpful information thank you
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@BenjaminAlex32
@BenjaminAlex32 Жыл бұрын
This is a great video, thank you for this!
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@martinzurita5437
@martinzurita5437 9 ай бұрын
great video, awesome content. keep it up man. congrats
@baldeagleApiaries
@baldeagleApiaries Жыл бұрын
new subscriber. thanks for the tips etc..
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the sub!
@alexwells2231
@alexwells2231 Жыл бұрын
Great video - I used to work as a management accountant so I found interesting how you did your maths. However, your overhead formula only truly works if you are only making a single product line. It seems you have a large margin for error in your industry if you can simply double your break even to get you selling cost. Most companies selling through normal stores also have Delivery costs, Shipping costs (international import duties etc) , storage costs advertisement costs.
@j.h.4570
@j.h.4570 Жыл бұрын
In his calculations he also included those in the form of "fees", didn't he? And he didn't double the calculated break even to get selling "costs". Don't mix up costs and prices, both are something different. He doubled his costs and made that his price, simply because market allowed him to. He might have also ended up cancelling the product, if competitors from sell it for less than his costs.
@TWC6724
@TWC6724 Жыл бұрын
Don’t erase this video. I’m saving it to my favorites! 👍
@catsheep86
@catsheep86 8 ай бұрын
Do you have a spreadsheet or other documentation that spells out your formula and breakdown?
@vicruzr
@vicruzr Жыл бұрын
Nice Video. For anyone who thinks that a company pays taxes, this is a good example of how the taxes a company pays are passed on to the consumer.
@SwedishCook1
@SwedishCook1 Жыл бұрын
Great video for an MBA class!
@PacesIII
@PacesIII Жыл бұрын
Profit is a balance between your costs and the value for the dollar for the customer. The restaurant model is to charge 3 times your cost to recoup materials, labor, and overhead. Sometimes you'll make a little less, sometimes more. There's no sure fire answer. Which is why retail always bothered me: employees get reprimanded for not making a sale when the door counter is the metric for those sales.
@ssu7653
@ssu7653 Жыл бұрын
2x your cost is a VERY good palce to start. The "right" price is where you make the most money overall, per sale is irrelevant unless you get into logistical problems. For people doing 10% and thinking they are very smart, thats 1 unforseen expence away from a loss. Always start out higher than you think you need, never hard to decrease prices if its to high. This is EXACTLY what Apple have do, push the upper limit as far as they can and when sales drop they release a "new model" slightly cheaper
@IngeBall
@IngeBall Жыл бұрын
Nice explanation!
@stevehubner560
@stevehubner560 Жыл бұрын
what a great story!
@davidndahura7437
@davidndahura7437 9 ай бұрын
Very good thank you.
@HowardBernard-q7r
@HowardBernard-q7r Жыл бұрын
Great stuff guys...
@STILLWILLPHOTO
@STILLWILLPHOTO Жыл бұрын
One conundrum I see is your slowest worker becomes your most profitable employee and your best/fastest is a burden. How do you incentivise quality work and efficiency?
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
For custom work or big jobs you would quote the work before you do it, then you have to make sure your labor stays within that quote, so quickness is still incentivized. On projects that get made over and over again, I have a standard time that we have to reach. If it takes 20 minutes to sand something and that is the cost I am charging the customer per product, and I have an employee that beats that standard let’s say 15 minutes. I can either charge less for the product, pay that employee more, or make more profit. A slower sanding time than the standard set would result in no employment. Small example, but I hope that explains it. Getting that standard time for mass produced products could be a video in itself, as well as, estimating/quoting.
@gregfraser3852
@gregfraser3852 5 ай бұрын
Great video I like your formula
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close 5 ай бұрын
Thank you! And thanks for watching I appreciate it!
@nevadacool
@nevadacool 11 ай бұрын
great job
@TheJ20jeepster
@TheJ20jeepster Жыл бұрын
After I figure out the break even price like you did, I then think how much I need to make from it to be worth it for me and still enjoy making it. 🤷
@KPHVAC
@KPHVAC Жыл бұрын
I would definitely tell everyone starting off in a trade, to take their rate and double it! HVAC, Electrical, Construction, etc. Things go wrong, you have to expand, you have to buy new equipment, hire new people, etc. Staying in business is expensive!!
@j.h.4570
@j.h.4570 Жыл бұрын
You can't always simply double. Sometimes it's ok to not double, as long as you're still making profit. Better sell something for a small profit only but keep your staff and machines busy, before you don't sell anything at all.
@KPHVAC
@KPHVAC Жыл бұрын
@@j.h.4570 I was thinking about people starting off in the trades or construction. I see it all the time. A new HVAC installer starts his own business and they are way too cheap. They wind up out of business in the first year or two.
@j.h.4570
@j.h.4570 Жыл бұрын
@@KPHVAC It's one of the reasons why people around here can't simply run a business in certain areas. First you're required to have a two to three year on the job training that also includes theoretical parts at school, so you learn the skills. And once you've passed your exams in that, you're still not done and have to attend a "master's school", so you also learn the business part. Of course that makes it more difficult to run certain businesses. But as a customer you can be more sure that certain quality requirements are met. And as a business owner you can be more sure that you won't run into troubles that might have been avoided easily, because you don't know how to do the "office part" that is also associated with an hvac business for instance. Here even a hairdresser needs to have his "master's degree" (NOT university related) to be allowed to run a hair dresser's salon. Running a successful business means you have to have knowledge both in what you're doing on site, as well as what you're doing in the office.
@j.h.4570
@j.h.4570 Жыл бұрын
More or less and besides slightly different terminilogy the same that I learnt in school in the mid 90s when I was like 17 or so. What you call "overhead" is actually called "common costs" but of course that's only different words. Depending on how big a company gets, it gets more difficult. And you might even start doing cost center accounting and all the other mumbo jumbo ;-) Back then already we also used around 25% margin when calculating a price. After all you have to keep your business running and hopefully growing too. Btw - what you explained at the end, when testing out your prices, more or less can be seen as market research. Once you have your cost per piece (unit cost accounting), you see if there are competitors and for how much they sell a similar product. Or do a poll, or simply test how far you can go. With a smaller business testing prices is less hard, imagine Budweiser going up and down with their prices - they would surely anger their consumers ;-)
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
What an insightful comment, thank you.
@PennsPens
@PennsPens Жыл бұрын
Great overview. Selling yourself in a job interview adds value = more $$. Yet under selling yourself means it just an unsatisfied job taking home a number/amount and living week by week. Most start-up businesses price on... labour + materials and maybe a little power etc. Think about how you'd make money if you weren't applying margins to everything - basically you'll end up paying your workers without making any end of year profits to ensure you stay afloat because your income will be paying for uour workers leaving nothing for yourself If your not adding margins and overheads as shown here and only charging for basic labour. You've brought yourself a non proffit hobby which certainly wont be making money. Therefore you'd be better of working for basic wages without the extra hassles of everchanging pricing, marketing, phones, machinery repairs, vehicle costs etc, etc. Cheap pricing drives down woodworkers pricing to compete with one another, sensible businesses sell on value, Not price. In fact studies show customers see price for products sit around 7-8 out of 10 - (1 being cheapest & 10 meaning product purchase on value Not based price). I huge number of people get mixed up between cost of product and sellable value of product which allows them to continue and have a nice little profitable nest egg for when you need it, ie repairs, machinery replacement etc. Schools really need to be teaching students basic things such as budgeting, profits etc. This sort of advice allows people to get onto the like of housing etc because they're of value rather than just another unsatisfied worker. This video is one of the best examples I've seen. Unfortunately most people won't take this advice causing them to fail from their own destiny of low paid wages for the time and effort they put in.
@phatroguedragon
@phatroguedragon Жыл бұрын
Excellent woodworking accounting video. You should do more like this.
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Thanks, will do!
@Ilicet
@Ilicet Жыл бұрын
in case anyone took his labor formula verbatim as he wrote it on the board it is actually more like =PRODUCT(SUM(C3,PRODUCT(C3,L3)),SUM(D3,PRODUCT(D3,M3))) OR (Hours+(Hours x .25)) X (Time+(Time x .3))
@jens-petterarnesen
@jens-petterarnesen Жыл бұрын
Stopped the video at 4:11 Does it say "Russian" on the wood in stock behind you?
@therealdennisroot
@therealdennisroot Жыл бұрын
Great video!
@cutting-it-close
@cutting-it-close Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@cullumsay171
@cullumsay171 Жыл бұрын
Am I missing something, or did the thumbnail show an equation with (3x + x)? Is that not the same as 4x?
@dannyb4314
@dannyb4314 Жыл бұрын
How did you come up with these formulas? At what point in your business did you create them? Is you degree is business or a related field?
@wdtaut5650
@wdtaut5650 Жыл бұрын
30% on labor seems really low. We figured it was closer to 100%, that is, double the hourly rate of the worker. We included training (initial and ongoing), administrative, insurance, and more. Maybe you put some of that in overhead. The point is, employees probably cost more than most people realize.
@tq2655
@tq2655 Жыл бұрын
Great vid bro
@thomasswearingen6971
@thomasswearingen6971 22 күн бұрын
The other thing that you need to know is what percent of sales is everything. Yours is 50% profit and the rest is Coast. I can tell you that if I'm over 25% in labor then I'm losing money. With my product usually 40% is labor. Knowing what you can run and still be ok is important.
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