The new makers always want to know how to set prices.
There are several different ways but the one that really works the best is this:
Rule 1. If you sell a knife with in 30 minutes after posting it on the internet, it was too low.
Rule 2. If you post a knife and it doesn't sell for a long time and you complain about all the other makers under selling and bringing the market down, you are too high.
At the very beginning, you should consider yourself ahead if you can sell one to simply cover the costs. You are then practicing for free.
Costs include:
the steel
bolster/guard/end cap steel
spacer material if used
the handle material
the glue
at least one or two belts
machine maint fund (machines wear out - I set this at $5/hour)
any pin material
sheath material
heat treating
postage for any back and forth
general shop fee for hand tools, super glue, markers, masks, band saw blades, rags, solvents, etc (I set this also at $5)
For me, the most expensive part of the knife is usually the handle material.
Steel second. It's funny how some get pretty worked up over the cost of the steel in a knife when it's only $10 or $15. Sending one out and back for heat treat is usually more expensive than the steel.
Anyway, I've calculated this a dozen times myself. *My* typical cost of everything above is around $75 to $85 dollars. When I finally started selling knives, I charged a dollar an hour for my labor and gradually increased that until sales bumped into rules 1 and 2.
Anyone else have a pricing method?
There are several different ways but the one that really works the best is this:
Rule 1. If you sell a knife with in 30 minutes after posting it on the internet, it was too low.
Rule 2. If you post a knife and it doesn't sell for a long time and you complain about all the other makers under selling and bringing the market down, you are too high.
At the very beginning, you should consider yourself ahead if you can sell one to simply cover the costs. You are then practicing for free.
Costs include:
the steel
bolster/guard/end cap steel
spacer material if used
the handle material
the glue
at least one or two belts
machine maint fund (machines wear out - I set this at $5/hour)
any pin material
sheath material
heat treating
postage for any back and forth
general shop fee for hand tools, super glue, markers, masks, band saw blades, rags, solvents, etc (I set this also at $5)
For me, the most expensive part of the knife is usually the handle material.
Steel second. It's funny how some get pretty worked up over the cost of the steel in a knife when it's only $10 or $15. Sending one out and back for heat treat is usually more expensive than the steel.
Anyway, I've calculated this a dozen times myself. *My* typical cost of everything above is around $75 to $85 dollars. When I finally started selling knives, I charged a dollar an hour for my labor and gradually increased that until sales bumped into rules 1 and 2.
Anyone else have a pricing method?