Introduction
“This product’s market price is only 500 yuan, so why is the quote for just a mockup 30,000 yuan?” This is a common question many clients ask. Comparing the prototype budget with the final product price is like comparing the cost of an architect’s blueprint design to the price of a brick. While related, the two exist on completely different value scales.
Core Difference: “Creating the First Thing” vs. “Reproducing Millions”
To understand the price difference, we must first understand the fundamental differences between the two:
- Prototyping: This is a process that creates something from scratch. Its core task is to transform a 3D drawing into the first, verifiable physical object in the real world. It is a highly customized, technically and labor-intensive “service” process.
- Injection Molding: This is a repetitive process. Its core task is to efficiently and cost-effectively reproduce thousands of identical products using pre-developed molds. This is a standardized “production” process, primarily based on equipment and raw materials.
The key lies in the “first piece.” The cost of creating a first piece is unique; subsequent replications spread that initial development cost over a large number of units.
Decoding the Cost Structure: The Economics of “Amortization”
Model Production Costs: Highly Concentrated Expenses
When you commission a model, the quote includes the following costs specific to this “one-of-a-kind” model:
- Preliminary Engineering and Programming: Experienced engineers spend hours analyzing drawings, planning processes, and writing complex CNC machining programs for this “one-of-a-kind” product.
- Intensive Equipment and Manpower Investment: To create this single part, we calibrate a multi-million dollar CNC machine and prepare tooling and fixtures. From operating the machine, finely polishing the part, to professional painting in a clean room, every step requires the dedicated time of experienced technicians. This is a craft that cannot be easily replaced.
Injection Molding Costs: Extremely Dispersed Expenses
A product sold for 500 yuan on the market has a completely different cost structure:
- Huge Upfront Mold Investment: Before production begins, hundreds of thousands or even millions of yuan must be invested to create a single steel mold.
- Miraculous Cost Amortization: This expensive mold is designed to produce tens or even hundreds of thousands of products. Assuming a mold costing 500,000 yuan is expected to produce 50,000 units, the mold cost per unit is only 10 yuan. The exorbitant mold cost is diluted to a negligible level by the sheer volume.
- Extremely Low Unit Production Cost: Once the mold is in place, the marginal cost of producing each product is extremely low, consisting of only a few grams of plastic material and tens of seconds of production time.
The True Value of a Model: “Insurance,” Not “Commodity”
Comparing the model budget with the price of an injection molded product can lead you to overlook the core value modeling provides: risk mitigation.
Imagine investing $500,000 in a mold to save tens of thousands of dollars on prototype costs. Only to discover serious design flaws in the product after mold trials, rendering the entire expensive mold useless. This would be a true disaster. The value of a $30,000 prototype lies not in the plastic itself, but in the design validation it provides, the hundreds of thousands of dollars saved on mold failure, and the valuable time it provides for revisions.
Conclusion
Prototype production is a highly customized “value creation” process, where the cost is concentrated on the “first” product. Injection molding, on the other hand, is a standardized “value replication” process, whose advantage lies in spreading the high initial cost across millions of replicas. Therefore, using the price of an injection molded part to determine the prototype budget is a fundamental misunderstanding of the manufacturing process. When planning your development budget, consider the prototype cost as your “R&D insurance” for the success of your entire project.

