I wanted to ask a general question to all the makers on here but first I will tell you my brief history. I started as a pool player in my late teens had a small pro shop for a short while. I became a machinist and in my eves began fooling around with building cues. I have aquired a full shop of tools. Three metal lathes, full size mill, pantograph and a variety of wood working tools. About six years ago i started collecting wood and building cues. I have not built alot but i built enough to know what it takes and I believe I have the skills to build quality cues. Up until now i have built mostly as a hobby but I have realized that I have enough invested that I should prob make a real go of it. Not go full time but make a commitment to building so many a year. So here is the question is there still a good future in building cues? With the advent of so much equipment and the access to so much knoledge it has realy become obtainable to anyone who has a strong enough interest. It is all supply and demand right? So with so much supply are we realy going to be able to demand enough for custom cues to justify the time and money invested? I mean the industry will always have the very upper crust who can demand top dollar but the average short stop who builds a decent cue has got alot of people to compete with. If you ask the guys who have been doing this for twenty years if they would have chosen something else? Is all the makers who have gotten ill or passed is this related to the enviromental hazards? How does pools declining popularity in North America play into this? Any way just throwing it out there and looking for opinions. Thanks for your time.
Hi,
Great subject. I could not have thought of one that asked a better question.
Pool has been around for 100s of years and will continue long after we are pushing up daisies. Today with a heavy duty recession going on there is a decline but that is not a permanent market condition. I think you have answered your own question when you said "the industry will always have the very upper crust who can demand top dollar".
If you don't believe you can join that upper crust then it's your hobby and a pleasing one at that. You are the best judge if you are honest and can be objective without letting your ego get the best of you. If you hold and inspect a cue that someone is getting over $ 2,500.00 for and can honestly say your cue is of the same quality concerning all of the feature details including hit, then you must believe that your cues will reach that status over time. Rome was not built in a day.
If you put your all into any endeavor and don't quit you will eventually hit the highest level your talent and brains will allow.
In cue making if you do the following with diligence there is no telling what opportunities might come your way:
Have a detailed game plan for success.
Invest in the correct plant equipment that will perform each operation in a repeatable fashion.
Become a journeyman through putting in the time and money to learn all of the hard lessons.
Strive to raise the bar concerning all details.
Don't take shortcuts.
Buy the highest quality raw materials.
Concentrate on all aspects of your product engineering.
Seek peer check and review.
Constantly look for ways to improve all aspects of your product.
Always work from a detailed drawing while machining no matter how good or familiar you are with the process.
Establish definable detailed procedures over time that you follow concerning all aspects of your product development and don't deviate.
Develop ways to reduce your labor input coefficient by being smart concerning machine set ups, build multiple cues at a time and other task efficiencies.
Don't be afraid to charge up to $ 100.00 per hour for your work. If you don't believe you are worth that kind of money for doing skilled, artistic custom work, then no one else will pay it. Once you advertise and sell yourself as a commodity no one will ever view you product as a high value proprietary item.
Treat the customer in a fair and honest way.
Treat the customer in a fair and honest way.
Treat the customer in a fair and honest way.
If you do all of these things and more, the world will beat a path to your door. Once they get to your door it's up to you to keep it open. By the way did I say, Treat the customer in a fair and honest way. Because without that you will fail every time.
Just food for thought,
Rick Geschrey