i'm channeling.
i'm channeling.
shrink, terrorist, poet, president of concerned cyclists for the abolishment of bovine source bicycle parts and head of the disaffected commie dishwashers union.
For me, it all comes down to guilt. I have always had a lot of trouble raising our prices, at least up until that time when I have to, to keep the doors open. Logical and reasoned? Nope. Just a result of guilt. So ... at least I can keep the increases a little lower if I don't get a raise. Ultimately, pretty stupid though. At least it does not make me love my work any less.
Tom Kellogg
Rides bikes, used to make 'em too.
Spectrum-Cycles.com
Butted Ti Road, Reynolds UL, Di2, QuarQ, Conour lite, SP Zero
Steel Cross, X-7, Crank Bros, Concour Lite, Nemesis, Grifo
Steel Piste, D-A Piste, PD-7400, Concour lite, Zipp 404
http://kapelmuurindependent.be
Shortest TFC Member (5'6 3/4") & shrinking
masters like sachs, etc should be charging at least 6,000 for a f/f
why? they fawkin deserve it
thanks -
i love my work. most of us do. we do it for ourselves much moreso
than we do it for our clients atmo. read. having said that, our clients
don't mind charging for their services, and i'm advocating that we
should feel similarly.
Good post. The "irrational" portion of the purchase decision is no different here than with a car or a house or a sofa. There's nothing exotic or weird about it - There's more than strict functionalism in lots of our consumerista decisions.
p.s. I love my Stumpjumper FSR. Specialized can make a hell of a bike. But I love it for different reasons than my Pegoretti.
GO!
I charge what I charge for a variety of reasons.
* I charge enough so that I can spend as much time with the customer as need be so they feel part of the process and enjoy themselves.
* I charge enough so that I can afford to keep doing this in the long run and to be able to give the customer top notch after the sale service and if necessary top notch warrantee work years down the road.
* I charge enough so that I can use the best materials that I feel money can buy and to put the best paint on it.
* I charge enough so that I can afford to take all the time necessary to make the bike just so and to never look at the clock and think "I've been working on this for too long - I should call it a day and ship it" even though I feel it could use a bit more love. I want every bike I make to be my best and doing your best takes time and time costs money.
* I feel that after thousands of frames and nearly 20 years I've learned things that many other builders don't know and that that knowledge, and the bike that result from it, are worth what I charge.
* I charge what I charge so that I can afford to make a reasonable living... To save a bit toward retirement someday...... to not need to work 80 hours a week to put food on the table......... to be able to take a vacation every once in a while. If the market won't bear that cost and I can't afford to make it all work then I'll do something else. Life is too short to work 24/7. I absolutely love the work but I also love time out on the bike, time with the Lovely Karin, time tinkering with my toy car and the occasional nap. There needs to be a balance IMO. If the market won't bear that balance and the phone stops ringing I'll have to do something else.
* As odd as it might sound I really don't know much about what my competition charges. My pricing is based on my work, my knowledge and my time. If someone else with similar skills is willing to work more hours for less money I'm not willing to get pulled down with them. We all make our own choices - both the builder and the client.
I hope that makes sense.
Dave
if i only listened to radio i'd know the reference. i think we're all missing the issue... and the issue is process. it means something that sachs closed the books to new customers, that mariposa closed shop, that these guys are from a moment in time and when you buy you're voting for a process, that dario and zullo are the last of the guys that didn't become huge corporations and still fabricate like they did 20 years ago.
i just hope enough new guys bubble up and feel fulfilled and engaged enough and have a chance to get really good, and then to be able to close the books at 50 or 60 having progressed the whole time.
the spooky thing is interesting because it mirrors what another young friend of mine is doing (predator bikes).. and that's being young in the industry, building handmade bikes, but having someone else do the fabricating remotely...and considering themselves a part of the same process as the handmade guys... rather than a cousin of the mass production process. not that there's anything wrong with that.. its just a different path and a different fold.
i'm certainly enjoying being forced to think about it. and part of that thought is realizing how good some mass manufactured bikes are out of the box too... but still how they aren't what you get when its not mass produced.
i come from fine arts, where price and value are determined by consensus at auction. that's where my views come from. and they come from being a shrink and limiting myself to seeing 20 patients a week and having to charge affordable rates in order to get the work done yet not so low that the work is devalued. it seems to parallel the discussion we're having.
to address the initial question. i associate price with value, and quality with quality. i never confuse price for quality... but i can see where a price makes sense, or over-values, or undervalues... but scarcity and desire factor in too.
shrink, terrorist, poet, president of concerned cyclists for the abolishment of bovine source bicycle parts and head of the disaffected commie dishwashers union.
thoughtful... I am really in two camps in this. Our steel frame sets are entirely in house, soup to nuts. Jeff does most of the building and I do all of the design and paint work. For us, titanium is quite different. Even though I do all the design and paint work, Merlin does all of the fabrication in their custom shop. We don't see the frame until it arrives here in a raw but fully fabricated condition. We don't make the carbon forks either. We just order the appropriate ones from Reynolds, Edge, AlphaQ or WoundUP (sometimes we steel forks for them ourselves). Granted, the most titanium frame sets we will ship in a year is about 55, but they still don't feel the same to us as our steel frames. I prefer riding titanium, but I feel much "closer" to our steel frames. I believe that it is the soup to nuts thing. Every little bit of each of them is our doing. It just means more emotionally.
Tom Kellogg
Rides bikes, used to make 'em too.
Spectrum-Cycles.com
Butted Ti Road, Reynolds UL, Di2, QuarQ, Conour lite, SP Zero
Steel Cross, X-7, Crank Bros, Concour Lite, Nemesis, Grifo
Steel Piste, D-A Piste, PD-7400, Concour lite, Zipp 404
http://kapelmuurindependent.be
Shortest TFC Member (5'6 3/4") & shrinking
tom... its funny because i don't see that process as being less good or derivative. its just different. i don't think folks perceive a ti spectrum as being less than or removed from a steel spectrum, do you?
i don't think a ti spectrum is less a kellogg work than a steel one no matter who stapled it together with magic flames.
i think it's really just the business owner's personal choice.
but it is a different leaf on the same branch and i wonder if the other leaves are all going to fall of the tree? or if it even matters?
does the distinction matter?
shrink, terrorist, poet, president of concerned cyclists for the abolishment of bovine source bicycle parts and head of the disaffected commie dishwashers union.
It makes lots sense!
I think you're really only in competition with yourself, primarily.
I believe most small framebuilders are "successful" when they make a product that
their customers want... as in " I want one of those!"... not need. If I need a bike,
there is the LBS. It seems the builders with the waiting lists have figured this out.
If the client is willing to wait, there has to be some reason they're not thumbing through
the interweb looking for another choice. Custom builders create their customers by
the process of their work, and to a certain extent, their personality.
Finally, I don't see a lot of builders living the high life. And why not? Highly skilled
craftspersons should be able to make a great living with what they offer...
(same goes for retailers). Everyone must love what they're doing, lets hope we're
all learning, and getting better at the biz side of things, as well at the skill.
-g
When a builder has total control over fabrication and design process it does not matter one bit if the materials were welded by his/her hand infact we've talked and kibbitzed in positive ways over this before (DeSalvo, Dario). A Ti Spectrum ,for instance, is 110% T.K. and I think he does not charge enough. There I said it.
Josh Simonds
www.nixfrixshun.com
www.facebook.com/NFSspeedshop
www.bicycle-coach.com
Vsalon Fromage De Tête
Steve Garro started this thread asking: "How much does frame price influence your initial thoughts on quality and why?"
As a purchaser of at least a few custom bikes, my answer is: "Not at all." I form my opinions and thoughts about the quality of a bike frame primarily from: (1) my personal experience with a frame and/or the custom builder; and (2) with the knowledge and information about a builder and/or his/her bikes that I obtain from others that I respect, including many people who frequent this Salon and the Serotta Forum.
The price of a frame may have a bearing on my decision whether to purchase a frame, but, to me, the price is irrelevant and says nothing to me about its quality.
Tom
As far as the actual product goes, it matters not a bit. My having Merlin fabricate our Ti frames makes those frames better than if I was doing it myself. Having said that, I still feel more connected to our steel frames. But that is only natural. Note again though that I ride titanium. And this all has a bearing on pricing in the end. But do our prices have an effect on perceived quality? I hope not. We, along with most of the other builders here make the best frames we can no matter what. The price is the price and the quality is the best each of us can do. Thanks for the discussion.
Tom Kellogg
Rides bikes, used to make 'em too.
Spectrum-Cycles.com
Butted Ti Road, Reynolds UL, Di2, QuarQ, Conour lite, SP Zero
Steel Cross, X-7, Crank Bros, Concour Lite, Nemesis, Grifo
Steel Piste, D-A Piste, PD-7400, Concour lite, Zipp 404
http://kapelmuurindependent.be
Shortest TFC Member (5'6 3/4") & shrinking
that says it all, and any framebuilder who doesn't
use tom's words as an example - should atmo.
you're welcome. all of you added immensely to this subject.
and garro-san, great thread you started. really atmo.
since all the bases are covered and we are starting to repeat
some of it, i'll lock this one and hope that the telai-ista board
continues as well as it has started.
thanks atmo.
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