
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Rick McDonough of Typestries (Long Beach Island, NJ) joins Bryant and Michael for a long-overdue conversation about three decades in the sign business. Rick walks through the unlikely path from a lifeguarding magazine to a college dorm sign shop, the wholesale boom that nearly broke him, and the EFI walk-out moment that made him scrap the contract and rebuild the company around work he actually wanted to do. They get into why AI has Rick more energized than he's been in years, from the food truck cop who designed his entire wrap in ChatGPT, to the Claude-built inventory system that finally solved his missing-bin problem, to the $15K monument signs AI is now pre-selling before the client walks in the door. Plus: why "no ugly signs" is a business strategy, why presentation quality wins bids even when your design is worse, and the workforce cliff that should terrify every shop owner.
In this episode:
Chapters:
01:30 Introducing Rick and a 20-year Facebook friendship
03:30 From lifeguarding magazine to first sandblasted wood sign
07:00 The "sald" disaster and the gospel of proofing
10:30 Starting up next to a cocaine distribution ring
12:00 Gerber Edge, NYC film & TV, and the start of wholesale
14:30 In CAD conversions and Gandy Innovations going bust overnight
17:00 Walking out on the EFI contract
19:00 Right-sizing on purpose: today's four-person shop
22:00 Outsourcing the right way and the referral economy
27:30 Wholesale burnout and missing the local work
30:30 Almost selling: the headmaster who talked him out of it
33:00 Making the work fun again
36:00 The food truck cop and Rick's AI conversion moment
42:00 AI slop vs. good prompting
44:00 How AI is pre-selling $15K signs
47:00 When AI becomes a problem: the 5-vehicle wrap committee
51:00 What AI can't do: shop drawings, codes, wind load
58:00 The lawn care guy to $3,500 wrap pipeline
1:06:00 Claude-built inventory and shop operations
1:11:00 Why presentation wins bids
1:18:00 "No ugly signs" and the industry's self-inflicted wounds
1:21:00 Using AI to connect with younger entrepreneurs
1:25:00 Why your website matters more than ever
1:33:00 The coming workforce cliff
1:39:00 China factories and overseas outsourcing
1:43:00 Rick's pitch for getting young people into signs
Resources & links:
By Peter Kourounis, Michael Riley, and Bryant Gillespie4.8
1111 ratings
Rick McDonough of Typestries (Long Beach Island, NJ) joins Bryant and Michael for a long-overdue conversation about three decades in the sign business. Rick walks through the unlikely path from a lifeguarding magazine to a college dorm sign shop, the wholesale boom that nearly broke him, and the EFI walk-out moment that made him scrap the contract and rebuild the company around work he actually wanted to do. They get into why AI has Rick more energized than he's been in years, from the food truck cop who designed his entire wrap in ChatGPT, to the Claude-built inventory system that finally solved his missing-bin problem, to the $15K monument signs AI is now pre-selling before the client walks in the door. Plus: why "no ugly signs" is a business strategy, why presentation quality wins bids even when your design is worse, and the workforce cliff that should terrify every shop owner.
In this episode:
Chapters:
01:30 Introducing Rick and a 20-year Facebook friendship
03:30 From lifeguarding magazine to first sandblasted wood sign
07:00 The "sald" disaster and the gospel of proofing
10:30 Starting up next to a cocaine distribution ring
12:00 Gerber Edge, NYC film & TV, and the start of wholesale
14:30 In CAD conversions and Gandy Innovations going bust overnight
17:00 Walking out on the EFI contract
19:00 Right-sizing on purpose: today's four-person shop
22:00 Outsourcing the right way and the referral economy
27:30 Wholesale burnout and missing the local work
30:30 Almost selling: the headmaster who talked him out of it
33:00 Making the work fun again
36:00 The food truck cop and Rick's AI conversion moment
42:00 AI slop vs. good prompting
44:00 How AI is pre-selling $15K signs
47:00 When AI becomes a problem: the 5-vehicle wrap committee
51:00 What AI can't do: shop drawings, codes, wind load
58:00 The lawn care guy to $3,500 wrap pipeline
1:06:00 Claude-built inventory and shop operations
1:11:00 Why presentation wins bids
1:18:00 "No ugly signs" and the industry's self-inflicted wounds
1:21:00 Using AI to connect with younger entrepreneurs
1:25:00 Why your website matters more than ever
1:33:00 The coming workforce cliff
1:39:00 China factories and overseas outsourcing
1:43:00 Rick's pitch for getting young people into signs
Resources & links: