BUT your last remark is way off. Consider the money you would spend on hiring those subcontractors? This can be a lot higher then building up / maintaining your own prepress department. Or if not a lot of printers who have prepress in house are not good in mathematics.
You're right: CAN be... it depends of lot of datas: the size of the print-shop, the number of plates output each month, the source of the files, etc.
... plus an extra parameter, because what is true in your country is not obligatorily true in another country, due to important variations in the costs of softwares and hardwares, and due to the more important varaitions in the cost of salaries...
... I already showed you that I pay the softs about 80% more than you, and I guess (but I'm not sure, perhaps we should compare our salaries???) that the cost of the pre-press-operators job is lower in France than in USA, so the investments are 80% higher for me, with a lower gain of productivity because the cost of the human work is lower...
I made a quick estimation this afternoon: I output about 80 plates permonth... to be simple,
• 50% (= 40 plates), from internal files or from customers's native files in low software versions that I could have handle with my old G4 with InDesign CS1 and XPress 6,
• 50 % from PDF or from customers's native file in CS3/XPress 7 or higher: for this jobs, either I need the 5500-euros-upgrade, or I have to subcontract...
The plate made by my usual subcontractor costs about 10 euros more than the plate I output myself (including the extra job I have to do on the files): so if I hadn't make the upgrade and I had give all these PDF and CS3/XP7 files to a subcontractor, for 40 plates it would have cost me 400 euros more per month, 4800 euros per year, and 5600 euros for 14 monthes...
... so upgrading my workstation to CS3/XPress7 cost me 5500 euros and allowed me to save 5600 euros before it became obsolete... OK, the situation is not as worst as I guessed: I have paid my CS3, and I even have earned 100 euros!
If you complain about CS software being to expensive, ask you customer to deliver good PDF's...
Are you kidding?
all my customers are already SURE that they give me good PDF! even when they make a piece of shit from Word with PDF creator!!!
It's very simple to understand: they have something-that-makes-PDF in their computer, they click on "PDF" and a PDF is created... and they are sure that it is enough to make a PDF to the printer: for many people, a PDF is a PDF and that's all...
... and they cannot understand (they even cannot imagine) that there could be good PDF and bad PDF...
1° their "PDF maker", whatever it is, outputs a PDF, so it works,
2° to make a PDF, they just have to click on "Print", choose "PDF", click "OK" (or click on "Export PDF" and "OK"): these 3 (or 2) actions are so simple, so basic, so easy to do, that they cannot imagine that they could have made a mistake!!!
... so if I say them that the PDF is not good, in most cases they receive it almost like an insult, because they are sure that they exactly know how to make a PDF, and that they have made a perfect PDF, and if I have an issue with their PDF it cannot be their fault, then it can only be my fault, because I'm an idiot and I don't know how to handle PDF.
(and I already had a customer that "explained" me how to print a PDF: he explained me that I just have to put the PDF on the Photoshop icon on the desktop, set the resolution to "300" in the window that appears, click "OK", and simply print the image from Photoshop...)
... and invest in a decent PDF editor...
Euhhhh... PitStop is not a decent PDF editor???
Back to the previous post: I need between 10 and 20 years to pay the ideal workflow!
******
pcmodem said:
I did not put any information in about RIP, platesetter, imposition software because that part is so variable based on what system you purchase. You can get cheap RIP's or expensive ones and I didn't feel it was fair to put that information in.
That's the problem... but now to work with PDF one needs at least a RIP able to work in ROOM mode (Rasterize Once, Output Multiple), in order to be able to first rasterize the PDF, and then use the rasters to:
- output JPEG to send to the customer for control,
- output eventually color proofing,
- impose,
- and safely image films or plates.
Here again, prices are not the same in France and in USA: a basic Xitron Harlequin RIP for my imagesetter costs about 6500 euros in France, the (almost same) RTI Harlequin RIP bought in the USA costs 4500 $ (=3400 euros) + a PC!
Some vendors include the upgrades for their RIP if you are on a support contract with them.
AFAIK, most include only the
updates: only the technical updates, for example from 7.0 to 7.1...
... but not the upgrades from 7.x to 8!
My feeling is that every production department needs to be making money, even if it is a small amount.
Yes, it's a way to manage the job...
... another way is to look at the globality of the costs, and see pre-press as a "necessary pain": it's a pain because it costs money, but it is necessary because it allows the presses to run and make money... and one have to find the solution that costs the less money than possible: do it quickly with up-to-date expensive softs/hards, do it with cheap softs and some by-hand-job... or subcontract!!!