Hard to differentiate this egg from the egg right next to it that was laid by a sister hen in the same coop.
I think it works for bread-makers because they added features to the higher end model to make it "worth" more money than the lower end model. What features can you add to a carton of eggs to differentiate it?
The key here is whether the customer sees eggs as a commodity (one egg is like any other) or whether there can be a difference (I cannot believe the difference between farm-fresh eggs and store-stored eggs). If there is a difference, how much are they willing to pay for that difference?
I am not feeding organic grains, or flaxseed to produce extra omega3 in the eggs. So my differentiation can only be store-stored vs farm-fresh. If I was doing the other things and backing it up with nutrition tests done on my eggs, then maybe I could make some customers believe that my farm-fresh AND more nutritious and healty eggs were worth, say $5/dz. But I have to believe the size of the market would be quite small in my area. I probably would not sell enough eggs at the price to cover the additional costs of the tests.
The poor OP just wanted to rant, and I completely understand how frustrating it is when people see eggs as a commodity. You believe you are going to have a nice little side business, but you cannot sell eggs for enough to cover the feed.
I usually end up giving the first dz free. After that I don't need to do any convincing. I still cannot raise as many chickens as I would like because I have a relatively small market for eggs.
Are there any local restaurants that would like to buy your eggs? They could do the value-added part for you by advertising that their breakfast dishes are made with only nutritious farm-fresh eggs from happy, healthy, free-ranging hens.