jfmckenna wrote:
Back in the 2000's when I was doing repairs for 3 shops, all of which closed down, I hung one of mine on the wall. About a month later I was horrified at how scratched up it was. People sure did love playing it. I said to myself never again.
After the 'great close down' one shop in my area did finally open up and has been around for at least a decade now so they seem okay. They sell Martin and when I went in there once months ago there was a small shop luthier guitar on the wall. It did not have the fit and finish of the Martins and when I picked it up and strummed it, it didn't have the tone of a Martin either and it was going for the same price. So that's a whole other story.
People buy with their eyes but it's got to sound good too.
I think there is some marketing economic principal of which name I have forgotten that suggests that when things are ridiculously high price they are actually more attractive to people. So I would even suggest if you are going to hang one on the wall price it way higher then a Martin. In the end what have ya got to lose? But the mindset there is that this guitar is special, how could it not be? Look at that price? But you will want to have that fit and finish and hopefully no punters will scratch it all up.
House keeping first so I'm apologizing to Glenn for this going off track a bit, not totally since the marketability of your guitars and the finish you choose are in my experience very much related and I will not relent on this. Builders should choose a finish appropriate for where the guitar will be a tool for musicians, period. If it's going to a gigging musician tough finishes are desirable for most, not all.
Glenn and I have been in contact with PMs and he's OK with me sharing that I don't think that any waterborne finish is what I would have ever gone to market with. Search the archives for KTM9 and see how for nearly a decade that finish dominated this forum and was the cat's arse to those who felt like they could do this a little bit and not subscribe to conventions that were arrived at by those before us with vastly more experience than us.
So Greven may have used this EM6000. Mike Doolin used KTM9 and even promoted it and five years later he switched away from it. Mike is playing these days but not building per his web site. Thanks to Mike too for demystifying epoxy pore fill for me and saving my participation in Lutherie with a pore filler that worked for me, finally...
But y'all choose whatever finish you wish, that's up to you and I'll say whatever my beliefs are and that's up to me, always.
So JF I have to ask when your guitar was scratched up in the store what was the finish you used

Forgive me please this is a natural question in the evolution of this thread which led us to retail music stores. The music store I used had little yellow signs that say "Please ask before trying a guitar." I still have one of the signs in my shop here in my home. My stuff was never scratched but I also used conventional, tough finishes and my stuff usually sold in a few weeks and was gone.
Yes you are speaking of the study of "buying styles" and how people are psychologically motivated to purchase what they purchase. Some people do indeed see higher priced stuff as having to be better and in some instances they are less interested in the utility of the item and more interested in the perceived "status" that they will receive from driving that BMW or whatever. Not always of course but some people just want really nice things and I tend to be one of them.
I'm never disappointed with what I purchase and I consider the price to be incidental to the value and utility. Typing this on a Mac which some of you will push back and say they cost more. I have a Mac in the other room that is 12 years old and I can still do everything I do except Photoshop on that thing and it has never failed, not even once and no viruses. I paid more but I got more and that's how I hope things may work.
Now not to throw one more severed head in OLFer's laps here like Col. Kurtz in the greatest film ever made, that year...

Apocalypse Now when I determined my pricing it was a combination of several things all very important to me.
First I did not consider myself a know-it-all hot shot because I could make a pretty and good sounding guitar. I held on to the idea that this, Lutherie was not my life or main gig and that I was a stranger in a strange land here.
With this said it was very important to me being a marketing guy who is very much into value and what that means to price in a manner that did not undercut or be disrespectful to the REAL luthiers of the day who make their livings doing this. I always was against those who will sell a guitar for peanuts or maybe what they had in it for two reasons.
Regardless of what you sell for if the idea is that you are not fully competent and as such charge less I would not sell at all. I gave away some prototypes to Serge and two others with the idea that all I want is data. Call me up in six months and tell me how she's doing. Find me five years later and tell me how she's doing.
When you sell for less because you are new at this you are also tacitly telling your client that you are uncertain as to if your stuff is any good. How the hell are they supposed to covet and value it if you don't???? That is NO way to go to market and it also leads to the nightmare of that guitar changing hands and someone flaming you on the Internet when it is abused and falls apart and you have to put up with all of this for your sunk costs.... Not smart in my view.
There is a reason why when Gibson employees here in Michigan were permitted to build their own employee guitar that they could not be serialized or have the Gibson name on them.... Gibson did not want to get any of this on them.....
OK so I wanted to be respectful to those in the trade already and price around their pricing.
Next I priced high compared to most here because I did believe in myself and I lived this stuff near 24/7 including trips to the U of M labs to work on bridge designs and such. I used only the very best materials I could find which is why Colin Symons got so upset when I bursted a master grade Adi top.
And lastly I priced high because I know how to do true cost accounting.
When you price your creations if you are going to be honest with everyone and yourselves you should use your true costs. This incudes everything including paying yourself a decent wage. Even so I found myself working for less than a dollar an hour building guitars and averaging a $5,500 each for them with some up to $7,500 and some, one as low as $3,500.
Dave Collins and I once did an exercise in cost accounting and found I was making a bit less than $1 an hour building because I would put in 140 hours on average in every one and I do tend to work very fast too.... I'm just very detail oriented and will not let something leave if it's not near perfect.
To summarize respect for the Luthiers already in this market, my true costs and a belief in myself which included having been a Six Sigma certified manufacturing engineer I believed that my stuff had earned the pricing that I went to market with.
So did my customers.
And they sold and sold until I was bored to death with it.... What are ya going to do.
Anyway that's my story. When I get around others who have made their livings in this trade for a long time my story is not all that unusual to them and I tend to get along with those folks who not many are here now very well. I respected them from day one and even ate **** here when I was new because I respected folks (and still do and always will) like Rick and Mario AND I knew and still do that there is always, always more to learn. I did push back too early on but found it counter to my own goals and frankly futile.....
So as a general comment and this has nothing to do with JF just because you can make a guitar in my view you are a guitar maker not a Luthier. I know Websters does not agree with me but to me a true Luthier is more of a generalist but highly experienced and can go from a Rik 12 to a Mandola and not think it's the former prime minister of South Africa. He was a great man too, eh but I digress again.
If you sense that the gloves are off you are correct I share what I believe and if you can't handle it don't read my stuff. I feel like I am channeling Chris Pile

Love ya buddy!
