Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
Articles
Members
Current visitors
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Forums
Dentallabnetwork.com
Business Ideas
Dental Lab prices
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="CoolHandLuke" data-source="post: 130931" data-attributes="member: 4850"><p>what you are likely to find is a very large price discrepancy between North american and EU prices, and an even bigger discrepancy between that and most of Asia.</p><p></p><p>however what you will also find is Supply companies like Dentsply and Nobel and some others directly competing with dental labs. this has forced price wars in places where labs are densely packed (like Toronto or Los Angeles) but has dwindled unit numbers for labs in smaller cities no matter what country you are from.</p><p></p><p>the specifics of the graph don't really matter then, as proximity and shipping costs factor into everyone's cost of doing business.</p><p></p><p>it makes no sense to have a crown made in Toronto and shipped to Venezula due more to time lost and cost of shipping, than to direct unit cost (unless it was almost free).</p><p></p><p>it does make sense the other way aroud however; to pay locally higher prices and save the time and cost of shipping overseas. money is saved in the short and long term (if quality can be acheived)</p><p></p><p>if you are merely fishing for prices to make undercuts, you are not viewing your business from your customer's perspective; if you think you are the most worthwhile lab to send cases to, then you'll have more sales if you can prove to me your lab is worth the investment. at that point prices don't much make a difference, bcause i should think your lab is worth paying more for your product.</p><p></p><p>i should never want to pay less just because its cheaper to pay less. that's bad business.</p><p></p><p>from a cost-per-unit basis however, everyone who is serious about their bottom line will calculate the cost per unit differently; there are 2 methods.</p><p></p><p>1. add the amount of labourforce paid per 8 hrs, divide by the number of units produced. this is the most accomodating figure of cost per unit because employees cost more than machines. any cost of hydro or material will only add fractions of cost, and will be paid off quickly. employees cost permanently.</p><p></p><p>2. add the time spent per unit by each labourer, divide by operational cost per day. this method cannot factor remakes because those (the majority of the time) are produced free of charge.</p><p></p><p>its not right to simply match prices to other labs - your lab might cost more to operate. </p><p></p><p>but even a 1000$ crown can wind up costing you money to make. you don't always make money on each unit. that is impossible.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CoolHandLuke, post: 130931, member: 4850"] what you are likely to find is a very large price discrepancy between North american and EU prices, and an even bigger discrepancy between that and most of Asia. however what you will also find is Supply companies like Dentsply and Nobel and some others directly competing with dental labs. this has forced price wars in places where labs are densely packed (like Toronto or Los Angeles) but has dwindled unit numbers for labs in smaller cities no matter what country you are from. the specifics of the graph don't really matter then, as proximity and shipping costs factor into everyone's cost of doing business. it makes no sense to have a crown made in Toronto and shipped to Venezula due more to time lost and cost of shipping, than to direct unit cost (unless it was almost free). it does make sense the other way aroud however; to pay locally higher prices and save the time and cost of shipping overseas. money is saved in the short and long term (if quality can be acheived) if you are merely fishing for prices to make undercuts, you are not viewing your business from your customer's perspective; if you think you are the most worthwhile lab to send cases to, then you'll have more sales if you can prove to me your lab is worth the investment. at that point prices don't much make a difference, bcause i should think your lab is worth paying more for your product. i should never want to pay less just because its cheaper to pay less. that's bad business. from a cost-per-unit basis however, everyone who is serious about their bottom line will calculate the cost per unit differently; there are 2 methods. 1. add the amount of labourforce paid per 8 hrs, divide by the number of units produced. this is the most accomodating figure of cost per unit because employees cost more than machines. any cost of hydro or material will only add fractions of cost, and will be paid off quickly. employees cost permanently. 2. add the time spent per unit by each labourer, divide by operational cost per day. this method cannot factor remakes because those (the majority of the time) are produced free of charge. its not right to simply match prices to other labs - your lab might cost more to operate. but even a 1000$ crown can wind up costing you money to make. you don't always make money on each unit. that is impossible. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Who makes the popular shade guide?
Post reply
Forums
Dentallabnetwork.com
Business Ideas
Dental Lab prices
Top
Bottom