SmoochyTX
Lifer
- Apr 19, 2003
- 13,615
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I appreciate the fact that you continue screwing with me. But let's forget the $1000 per computer cost. Let's make it $3000 per computer not even counting a monitor, speakers, etc. Just the box.Originally posted by: TruePaige
Originally posted by: SmoochyTX
Originally posted by: TruePaige
Originally posted by: SmoochyTX
Acting flippant towards a potential customer will get you nowhere fast. You'll sit there with inventory dying a fast death or you'll lose your contacts waiting on you to order parts.Originally posted by: TruePaige
Originally posted by: SmoochyTX
Already, I have no customer support for my question. Not a good start OP.
No can't say I could =p
I'm just one person who was curious about a few PC's (2-5) a week type stuff =)
If you only plan on building 2-5 PCs a week (and I highly doubt you could even do that reliably), the money you might make is not worth the tech support you're going to provide on the back end.
You will make no money and burn in bankruptcy.
Well I already got the point of the replies that it's probally a bad idea...but just FYI...I could technically build that many PC's but I wouldn't have the money to finance it that much up front, and wouldn't be comfortable building that many.
The actual building of a PC takes me about...an hour.
But then I like to run a 48 hour burn in per rig to check for any premature component failure, assemble a 3 ring binder of specific troubleshooting information, install any requested GUI mod's and install any pre-purchased software for the client.
That's how I've done on-site repairs/set-up's locally at least. Thanks for the feedback everyone, it's been...interesting to say the least...=)
If somebody I was buying computers from told me they didn't have the finances to even cover the cost of what I was buying I would run like hell away from them.
Physically building a compuer doesn't take that much time but there's no way in hell you're going to be able to hold a customer's computer for 48+ hours for testing. If I'm needing 10 computers in two days and I'm willing to pay $1000 each are you really going to tell me that you can't do it because you have to test them for 48 hours?
If you tell me that, you've just lost my business and I'm going to Dell or Gateway or somebody else where I can get the computers I need in time and have tech support.
You also have to remember that to save money on computer parts, you should be buying in bulk. What's the problem with buying in bulk? You're going to have parts sitting on the shelf losing value because the latest and greatest is coming out and you need to get rid of those parts. Charging full price on those parts will get you no business so you're going to have to mark them down. Always think inventory in a startup like this.
Who's going to be manning a phone or phones while you're building? Who's going to be packing the computers while somebody is building the computers? How are you going to take orders while tracking down parts that need to be replaced on computers you've already sold?
Note - I wouldn't buy a PC from someone who DIDN'T give my PC a 48-hour burn-in minimum. =p
That's basically standard to test high-end PC Parts.
Aside from the whole idea of burn-in testing your components ability to handle an overclock, it's a guarantee from the shop that all the components work ok, and that it doesn't get spontaneous blue screens or a premature PSU blowout.
I want 10 of them in 2 business days. You're really going to turn that down and tell me that you can't deliver? And what if I have a customer that would be willing to buy 20 boxes from you next week depending on how my order with you goes?
Seriously, stop busting my balls and think more about your own.
