What would I change? Not one thing... every single step in this process has taught me something, brought me closer to my goal, kept me going forward even when it's been steps backwards...
If you had asked me even just a few hours ago if I was successful, I would have said no... why? Because my breeds are not where I personally want them to be, quality wise... but then I saw something amazing, and for me, incredibly humbling... I have a reputation that even people I have never agreed with acknowledged... and that's not something that comes overnight... there's many, many more well known breeders who have much more time, money and care invested in their flocks, but this small step means a lot to me... and it does mean I am succeeding... thank you for bringing that to light...
Now, on topic... you are not being judged for wanting to make money off of a living animal, nor are you being crucified for looking to make a living off of them...but your perception is a bit narrow and all everyone has tried to do is give advice and help you to see reality... your response has been to dramatize others reactions, make broad assumptions and to end up insulting an entire forum...
You talk of 1500 hrs into this project and $10k invested and expect to be getting a return on that in 6 months... with what you are targeting, it's just not going to happen... and all we have done is try to help you see that before you experienced a disappointment so many of us have already experienced... it's going to cost much, much more than that with hundreds upon hundreds of hours more, and then it doesn't stop there... maintaining will cost and there is always work to be done, so hours keep stacking up...
And to breed any breed in quality takes much more than 6 months to acheive... it's a constant variable, but even to start you have to grow out your first generation, pick your breeders, then grow out their offspring to see what they turn out like... then cull undesirable traits, and breed back... or acquire a new line to add in, and then that brings in a whole new set of variables and you have to test breed, grow out, see what they're like, adjust your breeding program again, and so on and so on... this is in any breed... and customers are picky, if they're not perfect, they will let you and everyone else know it... so build a reputation of being open, honest and fair... that takes a lot of time investment... this pushes back your return timeline even further...
And then there's the market... maybe in one area, Ameraucanas are a dime a dozen, so you're lucky to sell chicks for $5... in another area, they're in high demand and little supply, so they're going for $20 per chick... but that will shift, things change and people change... ask for what any breed is going for and you'll get as many different prices as you do the number of people who respond... and any bird is only worth what another is willing to pay for it...
Yes, you see a well known breeder selling a pair of birds for let's say $200... nice profit, you think... but what you don't see is the 20 years that breeder has already invested, along with the thousands upon thousands of dollars spent to get to that point... am I exaggerating? Nope, not really... in 3 years alone, I think our investment has been your $10k a good several times over... not to mention my own personal labor costs, because that factors in too...
Don't you think we all would love to make our living doing exactly what we love? I guarantee it, but it's not stable nor is it financially realistic... you expressed concern about getting fertile eggs in winter, but in reality, there is no market for chicks in winter... most people do not want to winter brood, so you'll have to foot that cost yourself as well... you'll get better prices in spring, but come fall, most prices bottom out as well... so money coming in will be seasonal and must be managed to stretch for the rest of the years budget... but then unexpected issues will arise, predators will find a way to get or harass your birds, injuries will happen, hens will get stressed for whatever reason and stop laying... fertility will suddenly be an issue... cockbird turns mean... hens don't get along... etc...
These are things that can happen... will happen... there is no perfection when dealing with any animal, just as there is no perfect bird in any breed... an SOP is what is strived for, a constant goal, not what is acheived every day, or every year or even every 10, 20, or 30 years...
Nobody said you wanted to run a commercial egg plant, or a chicken mill... if you want to run a hatchery, then run a hatchery... expect hatchery prices though...
You want to compete with GFF? I say good luck to you... but realize what they do... they go to other countries, pay their prices, import those birds back, pay the permits and importation and transportation fees... and quarantine time, plus that fee on top of their feed and care and vet care... and then they bring them into their place, breed, grow those out... see what they get and cull, and breed again... and sometimes it ends up being a complete disaster... just because a pair or trio looks good themselves, doesn't mean their offspring will be any good... it's a risky investment, takes a lot of capitol to see it through and there still is no guarantee of any return...
I was not joking about my advice if you want to make some money, get a gold based cockerel and silver based hens, breed simple sex-links and sell the heck outta them... keep 1 large coop and keep your cost minimal... end return won't be a lot of money, but it would keep you in the black... enough to live off of? Eh, maybe a second coop and raise broilers... eggs, meat and guaranteed female chicks will always be needed... that's about all the guarantee you can get...
For rare breeds especially or any breed to produce quality, expect much longer than 6 months before you start to see even pennies returning on your investment... in many breeds, 6 months isn't even long enough for pullets to start laying... much less their offspring...