Episode Description
Summary:
In this Office Hours episode, Paul answers a wide range of listener questions pulled directly from the Handcrafted Network community. The conversation centers on realistic income expectations, especially the path to paying yourself $150K as a maker, and how different business models—custom furniture versus cabinetry or millwork—affect cash flow, scalability, and long-term value.
Paul also digs into the realities of running a custom shop: setting delivery expectations without locking yourself into impossible timelines, navigating hiring and workers’ comp, and fixing one of the most common pain points for small shops—pricing. Throughout the episode, he emphasizes long-term thinking, efficiency over speed, and building systems that support both profitability and peace of mind.
Key takeaways & highlights:
- $150K income is realistic—but the path matters. Cabinetry and millwork often reach cash-flow goals faster than custom furniture, while furniture brands can build more long-term enterprise value.
- Think long-term vs. short-term cash. Service-based shops can generate income quickly; brand-driven businesses take longer but may be more valuable over time.
- Avoid hard completion dates. Paul explains why he gives broad delivery windows (e.g., 3–4 months) and how under-promising builds trust in custom work.
- Track dollars out, not just timelines. Focusing on monthly revenue shipped per employee can simplify scheduling and operations.
- Hiring doesn’t have to be all-or-nothing. Early use of 1099 contractors and networking for the right insurance agent can lower barriers to growth.
- Pricing starts with tracking. Recording hours, materials, and true costs is the foundation of profitable pricing.
- A simple pricing framework. Calculate true cost of goods sold and multiply by a margin factor (e.g., 1.66) to protect profit and sustainability.
- Separate pay and profit early. Paying yourself and keeping profit in the business prevents cash crunches and bad habits later.
If you have a question you’d like answered in a future Office Hours episode, email paul@thehandcraftednetwork.com
. If you’re looking for community, resources, and real-world support from other professional makers, learn more at handcraftednetwork.com.