December 8th, 2011, 14:11 | #16 |
Tys
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EVERY "close in fighting"/CQB/indoor PB place I've seen is a horrible mess min 1 after the first PB game starts.
I'm sure this place will be great right up until then. There's something to be said about outdoor PB places...they're messy too, but less so with the natural wind/rain/sun. |
December 8th, 2011, 14:21 | #17 |
8=======D
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Owner appears to be a building contractor in the Mississauga area.
Why would you want anyone to play on a partial completed field unless you ran out of money to complete it? I'm all for new venues.. the more the better However in my experience a new place will be the flavour of the month till it's played out. Unless you can change the configuration, and alter the access of advance or lines of fire places like this get old fast. This is a "wait and see" for sure
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Brian McIlmoyle TTAC3 Director CAPS Range Officer Toronto Downtown Age Verifier OPERATION WOODSMAN If the tongue could cut as the sword does, the dead would be infinite |
December 8th, 2011, 17:44 | #18 |
Cobalt Caliber
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I would also like to see if they are serious about running airsoft, ie are they going to clean all the paint off atleast periodically.
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December 8th, 2011, 23:55 | #19 |
Meh. Splatters has scarred me for life.
Indoor paintball venues are catastrophically disgusting. It sucks that there isn't enough critical mass in GTA airsoft yet that a venue doesn't have to resort to filling their interior with sand, crazy children, paint that smells like barf and feet, and turning off all the lights. For anyone who is into the various popular airsoft YouTube channels like crazyncman, echo1, shwell11, evike, etc, it looks like dedicated (clean) airsoft facilities are springing up all over the place down in the US. If any metro area has the potential to have at least one facility for airsoft-only in Canada, it would be the GTA, but I'm unsure how far we have to go for the numbers to be high enough. Things are obviously on an uptick. I've talked to at least one retailer who was considering opening a field, so it's not out of the realm of possibility. |
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December 9th, 2011, 01:28 | #20 | |
Mexifaggot
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Guardians of Asgaard - KF25 - Primaries: LCT AK74MN w/SKTBR, VFC M4 SOPMOD Block 2 Secondary: Latino heat, TM Glock 17 |
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December 9th, 2011, 01:37 | #21 |
takagari
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Winnipegs had for for years.
Next time I goto Trenton for training I'll bring my gear. Rent a car and meet up in gta
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Eddie Creek, MB Airsoft Field, Valken Dealer, Local Age Verification [COLOR="DarkOrange"][B] |
December 9th, 2011, 10:49 | #22 | |
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Add additional revenue streams from sales, and it becomes profitable. key aspect is capitalization, if the business is started with borrowed money it's far more risky. but if you had a couple hundred thousand sitting around, you could probably get your money back out over a 10 year operational period.
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Brian McIlmoyle TTAC3 Director CAPS Range Officer Toronto Downtown Age Verifier OPERATION WOODSMAN If the tongue could cut as the sword does, the dead would be infinite |
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December 9th, 2011, 12:38 | #23 |
Cobalt Caliber
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Yea but that being said, not many people who have that sort of money laying about have it cause they invest in something that may make a profit and when it does its not a whole lot of profit. Even then mistakes someone makes running the business would be all the harder to recover from.
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December 9th, 2011, 12:42 | #24 | |
8=======D
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I've run the numbers enough to know that there is money to be made if it is combined with the right supporting revenue streams.
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Brian McIlmoyle TTAC3 Director CAPS Range Officer Toronto Downtown Age Verifier OPERATION WOODSMAN If the tongue could cut as the sword does, the dead would be infinite |
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December 9th, 2011, 14:22 | #25 |
Cobalt Caliber
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I guess if anyone was to do it, you would be the person, seeing as you have experience with TAC3
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December 9th, 2011, 16:55 | #26 | |
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Like Brian says, there are ways to make this happen, it just takes some careful planning, diversification in revenue sources and good marketing. For this reason, my money is on a retailer trying it first, but I could see someone like Brian doing it first too. Or someone like Brian in conjunction with a retailer. If there was a place with a decent enough setup, I might be willing to pay a fairly substantial annual membership fee. I've only had one person actually survey me on whether I'd be warm to the idea or not, so I'm not sure the potential is even being measured or is well-understood. Last edited by MaciekA; December 9th, 2011 at 17:01.. |
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December 9th, 2011, 17:13 | #27 | |
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lets run some numbers 10$ a foot is a decent cost for warehouse space lets say we want 20 000 square feet , that is $200 000 a year rent Utilities for such a space , call it 2000 a month , = 24000 a year Insurance - 10 000 a year Employees , 60000 a year rough total $294000 a year operating costs , that is monthly carry costs of $24500 a month Lets say we charge $20 a session, that is 1225 session a month , lets say you run every day . That is 40 sessions a day So you need on average 40 people a day to play , every day How do you get to that? .. sessions are time limited , say 1.5 hours of $20 so most people will want to play 3 hours so now you only need 20 people a day to make it run. that does not sound like much .. but it is.. you could supplement this by renting the facility out for Police training. and you could add more revenue as well by having a pro shop Add more with selling snacks and such. Add more by renting guns and gear now you have a business, but YOU still have not made any money for you to draw a reasonable living from this you need another 10 sessions a day, The killer is start up costs.. to renovate 20000 square feet well .. it's big dollars. and you would need to be able to reconfigure the space regularly or it would get stale and revenue would suffer.. Now .. carve 4 months time out of the year as no one wants to play indoors when they can go outside.. so you need to earn all that money over 8 months . During the winter months you would need to be grossing 40 000 a month to make the enterprise worth doing .. that is 67 sessions a day every day of the week Lets say most people want to play 2 sessions , rent a gun and some gear , and buy a snack while there , so the revenue per player would be on average 20 +20+20+ 5 + 65 - So to make your $40 000 per month you would need about 620 players, Say 30% are repeats. So you need about 430 players to play every month .. carve out the revenue for people with their own guns .. and you are back to 500 players Basically Every airsofter in the city would need to play at your facility every month at least once to make this work.
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Brian McIlmoyle TTAC3 Director CAPS Range Officer Toronto Downtown Age Verifier OPERATION WOODSMAN If the tongue could cut as the sword does, the dead would be infinite Last edited by Brian McIlmoyle; December 9th, 2011 at 17:21.. |
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December 9th, 2011, 17:27 | #28 | |
wise
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December 9th, 2011, 17:36 | #29 |
brian is 100% right
biz is numbers and they dont add up im running weekly indoor games in hamilton this winter ends in march im lucky to find this place...........not viable all year im this area yet but guys this is how things get bigger im glad ppl are contributing to discussions like this |
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December 9th, 2011, 17:51 | #30 | |
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1) To what degree can the cost of the real estate be brought down, and how? 2) Do you think US AS-only fields are starting from a money-losing operation and then gradually trying to recover using various other sources of revenue (retail in particular), or do you think they're benefiting from very cheap land? I guess I'm wondering to what degree the field mentioned by the original poster is potentially benefiting from very cheap space. |
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