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Survey for engineering class
Standard disclaimer: I wasn't sure where to put this.
Background: I'm in a product development class at college, and my group in the class is to the point where knowing how much people would pay for our product would really help. The question: About how much would you pay for a custom pair of jeans? I'm not talking department store custom here, I'm talking a pair made just the way you want them--style, size, color, the whole 9 yards (OK, yard and a half). Please use the poll to respond. |
Re: Survey for engineering class
Heh, reminds me of that King of the Hill episode where Bobby takes Home-Ec and repairs Hank's jeans. Anyway, I probably wouldn't buy it if something already on the market fit me well. Is there that much of a market left un-touched by existing off-the-shelf jeans?
EDIT: You did mention color. I suppose there are several colors of jeans left unexplored, which may be popular with a younger crowd. Not a bad idea. |
Re: Survey for engineering class
You might be surprised. For example, how many styles of jeans are there? Now, let's say that one style fits you really well--say, relaxed fit. But the pockets are lousy for whatever you want them to do. So you can mix and match another style's pockets--say, carpenter--into the jeans, along with whatever else you want. Same price range, same cloth, but suited for whatever you wanted to do, in both fit and additives. ("Standard" additives are still in the TBD stage, so if there's one you might like to see, speak up.)
Yes, we are kind of aiming for the younger crowd. But when your prof likes the idea a lot, and he's been around a while... |
Re: Survey for engineering class
That actually does bring up a good point. I have one pair of jeans I like, but wish had the pockets from another. Still not sure I'm particular enough to pay extra for it though.
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Re: Survey for engineering class
I would pay my standard 10-20 for a pair of pants. I don't really see me spending any more. To me, they are just clothes.
Suggestion: I don't wear jeans. If I could get khaki pants customized I would pay the 10-20, but only if it didn't take much time to customize. Anything more then check the boxes, and I would lose interest simply out of not caring enough and laziness. If they had to be jeans, I probably wouldn't want them. If it is reasonable to branch your project to cover different fabrics, you might reach a much larger market base. Afterall, everyone wears pants...not everyone wears jeans. |
Re: Survey for engineering class
You know, there's a funny thing about branding and marketing: people will often pay more for an otherwise-identical product marketed under a fashionable name. I assume that you'd (hypothetically) be selling these as EricH-brand, which enjoys no recognition in the market—if so, you'll probably find that people are willing to pay much less than if it was a "designer" brand.
Of course, even for custom jeans, unless you're doing something ill-advised like making them in America with engineers for labour, the cost to manufacture each piece is going to be pretty low anyway. There's another weird consequence of this business model: the consumer has to know what he wants in specific terms. Normally, you don't have the luxury of shopping with such specific expectations—so will your target market want (or even know how) to make those styling decisions for themselves when dealing with you? |
Re: Survey for engineering class
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Since $0 isn't an option, I will put it here. I don't wear jeans. Shorts preferred; khakis when required. |
Re: Survey for engineering class
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Re: Survey for engineering class
To answer a few questions that have come up:
Expansion into non-jean markets is a "future expansion"; i.e., get started in jeans and go from there. We do have a couple of those in mind. It's quite possible that a bolt or two of non-denim fabric might sneak in, though. Tristan: That's actually how we'd start up... three engineers making these in America. That is, however, three engineers who would own the company, and who are trying to keep costs low. General idea is pretty much a check-the-box or fill-in-the blank model (how else to you put the sizes in?). RMiller: research that we've done shows that it takes about a yard and a half of fabric to make one pair of jeans. |
Re: Survey for engineering class
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Another consideration: are you going to bunch orders together into production runs, or respond individually to orders? If you can run orders together (like once per week), you'll probably be significantly more efficient. |
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We are going for individual orders, unless a pre-wash is requested. At that point, it's whenever the washing machine has enough to do a load. |
Re: Survey for engineering class
Wow, when I saw the title in the Portal and clicked on it and saw, How much would you spend for a pair of jeans. All I could think was, "WOW!, someone needs a life." And then I read what Eric said.
I wrote 50-60 just because I don't like jeans at all and over the past 7 years, I have only owned 2 pairs of jeans that I semi-like and even then I still wasn't completely happy with them. So I would spend the extra dough to get a pair that I actually wanted to wear.:o |
Re: Survey for engineering class
There are non-custom jeans that sell for significantly more then the price you ended your poll. For example, Diesel for $295.
I'd be worried about selection bias by polling people on chiefdelphi about fashion. |
Re: Survey for engineering class
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I'm aware of the higher-priced non-custom jeans. The upper range of the poll is above our current target price range (note: said range may change a bit). The group looked at the $100+ range and said something to the effect of, "Let's not go there!" |
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Don't worry, I think we all know what you mean.;) |
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