akicer wrote:vasta41 wrote:akicer wrote:Why not creators just admit they choose WJPC because they want to make more money?
I'm not thinking this deck is money grabbing either, the price are reasonable - 12 for SE and 30 for a gilded LE.. I'm also referring to the Kalevala deck which I love the design but a more limited deck (a better looking one IMO) with higher price and with a shitty printer is something I found unacceptable...
I appreciate that people don't think that this is just a money grab. Because if it was, I am a pretty bad accountant:
- Say it's a 2000 deck print run - ~$2/deck
- Shipping to the States - ~$0.5/deck
- Fulfillment - ~$3-4/deck
- KS/Stripe fees - ~$0.5-1/deck.
- Total profit: ~$2.5/deck which has to include all promotion, imagery, post-production distribution, etc, PLUS cover all the unsold decks.
Say KS pre-orders 500 decks, that leaves 1500 unsold, for which the $2.5 profit/deck sold ($1,250) has to cover everything - i.e.: the project will net around a total LOSS. Hardly an effective money grab.
Not many people are getting rich off Kickstarting playing cards - most of us do it for the love.
WJPC has been extremely easy to work with and their quality (at least on the samples provided to me) was pretty good. Their prices are a bit lower than some companies, a decent amount lower than other companies (LPCC, EPCC) and a huge amount lower than other (USPCC) - all that to say that it allows small companies like myself to print small run decks at a reasonable price (not $15/deck but $10/deck). I will price my next project with a different printer to see how that goes, but for this project, I have confidence that WJPC will do a good job.
It is really about the math - I do love the designs, and I want to see them funded, but I can't justify asking people to shell out $15/deck when I can print the same design at a slightly lower quality for $10/deck.