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Why Chicken Sandwiches Don't Cost $1500 - YouTube
Channel: Wendover Productions
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About a year ago, Andy George from the channel
How to Make Everything released a video called
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âHow to Make a $1500 Sandwich In Only 6
Months.â
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I made a chicken sandwich completely from
scratch, which cost $1500 and six months of
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my life.
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The video was hugely successfulâit got millions
of views.
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Then, a few weeks ago, Andy came to me with
a question.
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Obviously I didnât use the most efficient
method of making my sandwich, but why is there
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such a huge gap in price between the sandwich
I made for $1500 and one you can just buy
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at a store for much less.
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My nearest grocery store sells pre-made chicken
sandwiches for 2 pounds, about 2.5 US dollars.
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Thatâs 600 times cheaper than Andyâs sandwich.
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The economic principle that really makes the
modern commercial world go round is economies
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of scale.
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You might remember from history class that
an important step in the development of humanity
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was the beginning of specialization of labor.
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That was the point when advancements in technology
were far enough along that the amount of food
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one person could produce was higher than the
amount one person needed to survive.
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Since there was a surplus, some people could
go and do other things, like science, research,
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writing, and even production.
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This also helped spur the development of the
first real cities since everyone didnât
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have to live on farms.
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Specialization of labor was in a way the very
beginning of the use of economies of scale
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because instead of everyone growing and making
everything they needed, different people did
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what they did best and exchanged goods to
get what they needed.
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Fast forward almost 10,000 years, and the
world is almost entirely specialized.
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Individuals almost never make things for themselves,
except for Andy George.
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I challenged myself to see if I could as an
individual make something as basic as a sandwich
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entirely by myself.
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I grew all my own vegetables, harvested and
ground my own wheat to make bread, killed
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and butchered by own chicken, and even flew
all the way from Minneapolis to LA to collect
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ocean water to boil down for salt.
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The salt is what weâre going to focus on.
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The reason is because Andyâs salt production
process was almost identical to that of a
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larger firm.
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He had to gather raw materials, process it
into a product, then transport it to a final
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market.
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Those three steps have been optimized in our
modern world to yield insane cost reductions.
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I spent $298.88 on a plane ticket, $57 for
a boat, and $6.41 on a five gallon jug all
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to gather just the few ounces of salt I needed.
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He only needed a small amount, but for the
same price he could have gathered more than
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a pounds worth.
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For his six ounces of salt, Andy paid $362.40.
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Thatâs $52 per ounceâmore than triple
the cost of silver.
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Each gallon of seawater yields about 4.5 ounces
of salt when evaporated, so his five gallon
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jug could have carried enough water to make
22.5 ounces of salt, or 1.4 pounds.
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At that production rate, the cost per ounce
is $16.
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Thatâs 3.25 times cheaper!
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But we can make it even cheaper, we just need
more five gallon jugs.
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If we buy, say, nine more five gallon jugs
at $6.41 each our total cost would be $419.98,
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but we could make 14 pounds of salt!
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That brings the cost down to $1.87 per ounce.
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We can keep scaling this up, to an extent.
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Andyâs method of transport was flying and
at that base rate his total cargo capacity
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was only the capacity of his carry on bag.
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The largest carry on bags have a capacity
of 45 liters or 11.8 gallons.
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One gallon of salt weighs 18.1 pounds so assuming
nobody ever checks the bag Andy couldâve
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carried 213.6 pounds of salt.
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To produce that much, Andy wouldâve needed
153 five gallons jugs and the boat he was
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on couldâve only carried about 10 so he
wouldâve needed to rent 15 more.
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So if we add together the plane ticket, the
153 gallon jugs, and the 16 boat rentals,
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we get a total price of $2191.58âa lot more,
but itâs worth it because at this production
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rate the salt only costs $0.64 per ounceâbut
we can keep scaling.
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The average rate to hire a Los Angeles based
40 foot semi truck is $2 per mile.
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To drive the 1,912 miles from Los Angeles,
California to Minneapolis, Minnesota, it would
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therefore cost $3,824.
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The usable capacity for these trucks is 2,395
cubic feet or 17,916 liquid gallons, or 325,000
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pounds worth of salt.
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Sounds great, but the US only allows a total
gross weight of 80,000 pounds on the road,
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and that has to include the weight of the
truck itself, so the actual transport capacity
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is only about 40,000 pounds.
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Salt is just so dense that we canât load
a truck to its full volume capacity.
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So, weâll just produce 40,000 pounds of
salt and for that weâd need 2,857 boat rentals
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and 28,571 five gallons jugs.
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For the sake of explanation weâll pretend
that we canât re-use the five gallon jugs.
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Those boat rentals would total up to $162,849
and the jugs would add up to $183,141.
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So including the transport cost by truck,
producing 40,000 pounds of salt would cost
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$349,814.
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Thatâs now a cost of $0.54 cents per ounce.
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As you can see, as you get into higher and
higher levels of production, the advantage
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of producing more grows smaller.
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It was 25 times cheaper to produce 214 pounds
of salt than to produce 1.4 pounds of salt,
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an 152 times increase in production, but increasing
the production from 214 pounds to 40,000 pounds,
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a 314 times increase, only decreases the price
by 1.19 times.
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Letâs shake up the production process.
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Instead of boiling the sea water down to salt
in Los Angeles and then transporting it to
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Minneapolis, letâs say that Andy transported
the sea water to Minneapolis then boiled it
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down.
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What would the cost be then?
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Well, seawater weighs about 8.6 pounds per
gallon, and once once again we can only carry
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about 40,000 pounds or 4,651 gallons.
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This will cost $3,824 for the truck, $5,968
for 931 five gallons jugs, $5,358 for 94 boat
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rentals, and in the end will only yield 1,308
pounds of salt.
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To make these 1,308 pounds we spent $0.60
per ounce.
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A difference of six cents per ounce may not
seem like a big deal, but once you get to
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the scale of producing, say, 100,000 pounds
of salt, those six cents add up to $96,000
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dollarsâmore than the price of a Tesla Model
S.
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This demonstrates a very important principle
in manufacturing.
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There are essentially two types of productsâweight-loosing
and weight-gaining.
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Salt is one of the greatest examples of a
weight-loosing productâyou put in a lot
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of raw material, in this case seawater, to
make a little product.
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Obviously it doesnât make sense to ship
the raw seawater cross-country when you can
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just boil it down in Los Angeles.
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This is why processing plants for almost all
weight-loosing products will be located near
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the source.
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The other type of product is weight-gaining.
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You take a small amount of raw material and
make it into something much heavier or larger.
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A great example of this is Coca Cola.
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They have more than 900 bottling plants worldwide
just so they can lower costs.
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If transport was not a factor at all, they
could achieve lower costs by having one single
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mega-factory, but once their soda is made,
they still have to get it to the end-consumer.
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The cost of transport is closely linked to
weight so since they just take a small amount
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of flavors and ingredients and add it to waterâsomething
available almost anywhereâit makes sense
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to produce their product near the end consumer.
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Overall, we achieved a 92-fold reduction in
the cost of salt by using the principles of
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mass-production.
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Every single ingredient Andy George used to
make his $1500 sandwich could have benefited
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from the principles of mass production.
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We also could have gone even furtherâwe
couldâve rented a bigger boat, used bigger
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containers, there were plenty of ways we could
driven down prices even more, but these type
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of cost reductions make the difference in
our modern world between a $1,500 and a $5
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chicken sandwich.
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I hope you enjoyed this Wendover Productions
video.
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I first need to give a huge thanks to my sponsor,
Lumerit.
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As Iâm sure you know from my old âWhy
College is so Expensiveâ video, college
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is expensive, and Lumerit helps you do college
for less.
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If this sounds interesting to you, head over
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Theyâll send you an email and then youâll
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Lumerit is right for you.
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Please be sure to also check out Andy Georgeâs
channel, How to Make Everything, for all sorts
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of great videos on making things from scratch.
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He just released a great video exploring where
the money you pay for coffee actually goes,
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somewhat similar to my âWhy Flying is so
Expensiveâ video so you will see an appearance
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from yours truly.
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I also recently started a Patreon which you
can go to by clicking here.
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There are a bunch of great rewards like early
access to videos, stickers, t-shirts, and
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best of all, every dollar contributed over
there goes right back into the channel.
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Aside from that, please follow me on Twitter
@WendoverPro, watch my last video on Urban
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Geography, check out my fan-moderated subreddit
at www.Reddit.com/r/WendoverProductions, and
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most of all, subscribe to this channel.
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Thanks again for watching, and Iâll see
you in two weeks for another Wendover Productions
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video.
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