The Arcive of Official vBulletin Modifications Site.It is not a VB3 engine, just a parsed copy! |
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#81
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As I would have though if you'd build up a pretty large collection of cheap skins for fast turn over, maybe 40-50. You should have done quite well on sales. |
#82
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It just depends on what you want to do and how you want to go about it. My experience is there is a good market for both. Whatever you do as a business, you have to be prepared to provide support after the sale...that is the key to success.
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#83
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And your doing like other site, selling skins created by other people like vBCore were you buy the rights to re-sell them. EDIT: Sorry I take that back. The ATX skin is being sold both on your site and vBCore |
#84
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I bought full rights from vbcore to several designs. He doesn't own rights to them to sell them any longer. You would be correct in your assumption. I am like several of the large skin sites in that I employ designers and coders to come up with my products. There are plenty of freelancers and custom skin makers and they fill a good market need and persue what they enjoy I suspect. The large resell skin sites like mine are a business, approaching the market differently than custom designers.
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#85
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First off, thanks to Chris M. for listing me first. Anyways, in the long run, from my experience, providing per-client custom solutions has generated far more income than pre-made skin sales. With that said, the work-to-money-earned ratio for pre-made skin sales is very nice and is a great source of (relatively) passive income. I've tested the waters with selling made-for-mass-consumption styles a few times with a few skins over the past two years. It seems to me that while it may be lots of fun waking up to a hundred PayPal payments in your bank, it becomes extremely hectic once Jelsoft updates vBulletin and you try to update a dozen styles within a couple of hours. In addition, providing support for non-custom skins is a major pain. There is always the 10-year-old kid who somehow came up with the money for a vBulletin license and demands support for every little template tweak and nags on you 24/7 to change an element of the skin or add a feature that he wants. Designing custom skins, on the other hand, is not only great fun, but also becomes more profitable than reselling skins, in the long run. Contrary to smacklan's post, I will heartily disagree about the business potential of doing custom work. Providing custom forum skins is not too different from designing a custom website. I've worked with many clients who needed not only a custom vBulletin skin, but also server setups, backend-programming, and even database administration. Contrary to what's been mentioned by just about everyone in this thread, there are companies that are more than willing to spend tens of thousands of dollars on their websites. In my experience, working with companies on a one-to-one basis provides more income with a faster turnaround time than simply selling pre-made skins to mostly individuals and small companies. |
#86
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#87
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Not all pre-made skin sites operate that way. Just as not all custom designers do either. One disadvantage custom designers have is they have a larger pool of competition as do they (sometimes) have a harder time proving a reputation for support. I would venture to guess, that most freelance designers aren't going to have the 5 figure opportunities you have, nor the skills to follow through on those opportunities if they present themselves. |
#88
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#89
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#90
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there are many advantages/disadvantages on both sides -- the key is to find a company that will be around for the long haul TIP WHEN BUYING SKINS: 1)__ Do not buy or use skins that contains deprecated code. ie. <font> :down: 2)__ Do not buy or use skins that do not validate XHTML. (validate code at http://validator.w3.org/) 3)__ Purchasing a custom skin will make your site stand out. Paying upwards of $1000 is not uncommon. NOTE: - Skins with deprecated code are usually bloated with unneccessary code. - Skins that do not validate is a sign that "designer" does not know what they are doing OR a sign that "designer" is in it for the quick buck. - 9 out of 10 skins that do not validate will usually give you problems down the road. |
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