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·TomCrouser: RT @margiedana: Sulzberger Concedes: "We Will Stop Printing The New York Times Sometime In The Future" http://read.bi/bu9tGl
·TomCrouser: Fed Reserve: 5 of 12 Fed regions have slower growth in July up from 2 of 12 in Feb indicating weakness spreading http://bit.ly/buaWiC
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·TomCrouser: Who first proposed Labor Day? Peter J. McGuire? Matthew Maguire? Recent research leans 2 Matthew. Whoever, THANKS! http://bit.ly/9spaH2
·TomCrouser: Testing my new Kindle n it's impressive. Electronic ink technology very visible in bright sunlight and lighting great in dark. Easy 2 use.
·TomCrouser: US Aug jobs down 54K sez Wall St Jourl - 3rd month in row. Although gurus anticipated more, small #biz won't get relief until jobs rise.
·TomCrouser: 3,000 subscribers to CPrint Report now, more than 10% of small press printing industry - to register, go to www.cprint.org...
·TomCrouser: Bad news: private employers cut 10,000 jobs in August according to payroll processor ADP - after 37,000 gain in July http://bit.ly/cHmAMO
·TomCrouser: Good news: consumer SPENDING up 0.4% in July BUT concern remains that high unemployment will kill 2nd half of year. http://bit.ly/dpgQrx
·TomCrouser: Oxford English Dictionary (20 volumes 700 lbs) no longer to be #printed; 2b online only; affects other dictionaries http://bit.ly/cxe5u2

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Old Articles
Wednesday, May 19
· CPrinters Will Meet to Look at Future
Wednesday, May 05
· Finding the Right Job
Thursday, April 29
· Mistakes Drive Me Nuts!!!!!!!!
Monday, April 26
· Chicago Board Meetings End With Gala
Thursday, April 22
· Board Season Wraps Up in Chicago
Sunday, April 18
· Is It Printing’s Fault?
Monday, April 12
· Awards Given at Nashville Board Meeting
Thursday, April 08
· Board Meetings Begin in Nashville
Saturday, April 03
· Sales for CPrint® Companies Increase
Tuesday, March 30
· CPrint® Name Widely Traveled

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Crouser Guide to Estimating Small Press Printing
Voice: (304) 965-7100 Fax: (321)214-0391



Order today for only $195 + $15 shipping & handling, by calling 304-965-7100! Also available for EFI PrintSmith estimating system.


With the Crouser Guide to Estimating Printing, not only do you get a price guide, but you also get the valuable Crouser Estimating Standards! Our Budget Hour Rate is disclosed. Compared your cost of operation to what our book uses to assue you are passing along appropriate costs to your customers. Our cost of paper is known. Paper costs going up? You don't have to wait for the next book to be published. Just turn the page to the next higher price table. We are the only guide to feature competitive Crouser Pricing. It's competitive in both the low runs (where you get more $ per unit) and the long runs where we're competitive without giving your profit away. We show you our estimating standards! No other printing price guide shows how much time is involved in different press runs, you can only get this in the Crouser Guide to Estimating Printing. Our guide is easy to use! It saves time for the owner for they can teach others to use the guide quickly. Not like the commerical guide where two people from the same shop can't come up with the same answers!

"We've used the Crouser Guide for 4 years and find it to be the most practical program available today. Keep up the good work."
- Mike Ridder, New Century Graphics, Mundelein, Illinois

"Your pricing is both an excellent tool for day to day operations, but also an excellent reference tool as well regardless of what pricing method or system you use."
- John Stewart, Q.P. Consulting, Melbourne, Florida

And here's some of the reasons our friends say what they do. Our Budget Hour Rate is disclosed. Compare your overhead costs to ours to assure you pass them along. Paper costs are given. Your won't guess at what paper costs are included. And then there is competitive Crouser Pricing, both in low runs (where you get more $ per unit) and the long runs. And, no one else shows you how much time is allowed in press runs. We do! Add it up and it's simple. It saves time because you can teach others to use the guide quickly. Finding prices in our book is fast.


"Where do you come off trying to tell me how much I should sell printing for in my market when you're not here?"

Printing companies operate under conditions of monopolistic competition (see The Crouser Report, March 1995). By definition, one characteristic is no one company has any great cost advantage over anyone else. Right. Some may have cheaper rent, some more expensive labor, but in the long run there is no dramatic difference in costs among printing companies. We all buy our equipment from the same vendors, our paper from the same distributors and rent from the same landlords. A dramatic cost difference occurs when someone has a unique product or process which changes cost structures like a bulldozer versus hand digging. Patents and trademarks tend to do this as well as specialized production processes (Moore Business Forms' original salesbooks for instance). For the rest of us laboring in the general printing market, our costs are very similar.

Now, let's go over to the statistical department. How do we know what printers' costs are? Statistical sampling. That's how elections are called thirty minutes after the polls close. Even for those who tell how a poll was wrong; understand most samples are right. An ill designed poll occasionally is as common as a bad print job. But we don't stop using printing because one job was screwed up.

Now, remember the bell shaped curve your teacher told you about in school? That's normal distribution or a description of data points. Take 100 prices for 1,000 8.5x11's. Plot the prices and you will find the central tendency. You'll also find some extreme prices higher and lower. Those are the lunatic pricing fringes.

There will always be lunatic pricing much higher or lower than the mid point, but generally they are not relevant. Why? Because someone screwed up or didn't know any better. Regardless, what is relevant for you is the range of numbers most of the time. That is what you must base your price level upon. And you must do it with the understanding someone will always be higher or lower (remember the bell shaped curve never touches the line).

With these specific prices, we use common research statistical techniques to describe data. Most common is the average (best of the worst and worst of the best). Although common, it is limited in usefulness when evaluating pricing. The average does not describe how much variance there is in the price points. Prices of 100, 50 and 1 will give an average of 50.5 as well as prices of 56, 50 and 45.

Variance in data points is extremely important in adopting a price strategy. For instance, our first set of data points can lead to adopting a price strategy of 70 while the second indicates 53. Why? Not all buyers know all prices (another condition of monopolistic competition) therefore some customers will be comparing prices of 100, 70 and 50 as some will be comparing 70, 50 and 1. If the printer can define the difference (product differentiation) between 50 and 70, then 70 will probably be purchased a great deal of the time. The "1" price is thrown out many times by the buyer as being unrealistic (even though some of you don't believe this). I'm not saying the "1" will never win, I'm saying that on "average" the "1" will not be purchased. And if it is, it takes an awful lot of "1's" to amount to one "70." Now, differences between 50 and 70 will have to be justified through sales activities and product differentiation. If you can't justify it, then you had better be prepared to sell for 50.

Anyway, contrast that market with the tighter data points of 56, 50 and 45. Again, some customers will be comparing 56, 53 and 50 and some with 53, 50 and 45. Same thing holds true about being able to differentiate the product. Difference is, there is less room to wiggle and that is what impacts your price strategy.

Another common measure, standard deviation, tells us about the variance in data points. Within one standard deviation of a normal distribution from the average price, about a third of all price points will occur. Within two standard deviations, about two thirds of all prices will occur, and within three standard deviations, all but a few prices will occur (remember the curve never touches the line for some crazy printer somewhere has just screwed up and given a price higher or lower than 99% of all other printers everywhere!).

We need not go into the theory behind standard deviation for it's boring and you can take a statistics class. Suffice it to say, that using deviations and sampling, we can calculate the average and project a low, middle and high value for any data point. And we'll end up with a more valid number than you will by calling the three printers closest to you pretending you are a customer.

Okay. We know our costs are similar by the very definition of monopolistic competition and we can figure a high, middle and low point using statistics. How do we find out what the costs are in print shops to assure we are passing them along? All one would have to do is find out the budget hour rates in print shops. Problem. Printers can't tell you what their budget hour rates are because most can't figure them. Hum. Stymied. Not so, faith healer. There is a direct relationship between direct labor and overhead in approximately a 2 to 1 ratio which means that you can approximate a budget hour rate by studying wage rates. Now, printers can tell you what they pay people. And because we at Crouser & Associates go all over the country and figure budget hour rates for people, we can keep you up with a high cost area wage multiplier, as well as the middle and low cost area wage multipliers.

All right. Summarize. Printers have similar costs, we can calculate high, middle and low values of data points, we can figure budget hour rates and then calculate high, middle and low values. What else do we need? Experts.

Delphi Technique: For the pleasing color section of the Crouser Estimating Guide, we enlisted the help of owners of two color presses doing process. Now, a Delphi technique is where we first interview each without preconceived notions and with open ended questions such as, "How do you price process color now?" After awhile, a pattern emerged which says certain "elements" are key to the price pattern in the market.

Once identified, we are able to measure each "element" such as set-up time. A unique feature of a Delphi group is we are trying to achieve consensus not take an average. So, once we have answers to our set up time question; I allow the experts to see each others' answers and to modify their response based on what others said. Sort of the old "upon further consideration" rule in NFL football. This way one individual's far off answer of 2,000 impressions per hour which dramatically skews the average, becomes a more realistic 5,000 and we generate a consensus of times and prices among a group of experts drawn from Florida to California and points in between.

Judgment: Now judgment enters into the equation. For instance, just because the average investment of equipment among our panel was $50,000 doesn't mean we will use $50,000 as the equipment cost component in our price equation. Why? We need to recover the $70,000 replacement value for the press, not the actual cost. The difference matters to only $4 per hour in a budget hour rate, but you'll end up with money to replace the press when it wears out.

Then, a first cut on prices: With a consensus on estimating standards, a first cut price can be calculated. Then, we modify to market. These numbers are then compared with market surveys to see where the prices can be increased and still allow a high probability of obtaining the job. Judgment is used, and a final price is determined. And bingo, a price guide with 206,000 individual price calculations plus the new color section is born.

In Summary: With this process found only in the Crouser Guide, we don't price below cost and yet we don't price on cost. Pricing on cost keeps printers poor. It costs similarly to print bond paper and letterhead. Yet, we can get more for letterhead. Additionally, pricing on costs results in lower prices. The faster we print and the more we invest in productive equipment to allow us to do it faster results in lower prices not better prices. Similarly, pricing on averages introduces the lunatic pricing fringe which keeps your price strategy artificially low. You may ignore the lunatic pricing fringes in your price scheme and see your overall profits go up dramatically without loss of customer base.

All this for you for only $195 per year. Not a bad deal. Now, go ask others to describe to you how they establish their prices. And while you're at it, ask them to tell you what their estimating (time) standards are for printing and exactly what budget hour rates they are passing along. Good luck.









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Published on: 2002-11-06 (9651 reads)

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