Finding New
Products For Your New Buisness
How to Find
New Products
Sometimes the only way a manufacturer can
expand sales is by introducing a new product. The products made have
reached their sales peak. Moreover, they cannot be modified to generate
additional sales.
It becomes a question of where to look for a new product that can be
made and sold at a profit. This guide speaks to that question. It
discusses a practical approach to the selection of a suitable new product
and suggests sources that can be helpful to finding such a product.
A systematic approach is the best way to find a new product. In such an
approach, your first action should be to set a new product policy. Before
you start to search for new product, set guidelines for that search.
These guidelines should help to provide answers to questions, such as:
Can the new product be made on present equipment? Will it be sold to your
present market? What is the profit potential of the new product?
The second major action involves responsibility for finding a new
product. Will you personally handle the project? Or will you delegate it?
Either way, the person who looks for the new product should have a clear
understanding of the resources available for this project. In addition,
he/she should be authorized to make decisions for your company.
Defining a New Product for Your Company
Although there are thousands of products available on a reasonable
basis to any company that will manufacture and market them, the question
is: Which ones can be made at a profit? In fact, so many exist and are
being generated, it would consume all the resources of a small company to
examine each one of them only briefly. On the other hand, too brief a
search or a hasty decision can result in costly mistakes, if not outright
disaster. It is thus imperative to define the product you are seeking.
Your task is to get on paper some facts about the kind of new product
you want to produce in your factory. These facts consist of your
requirements in general terms which will be applicable to the new product.
The following questions, though not all inclusive, should stimulate your
thinking in defining a product or establishing criteria by which you can
judge potential products. When you have set such criteria, you can write a
"profile of product interest."
Your Company's Strengths
1. Is manufacturing your company's strength?
2. Do you prefer a highly automated production line?
3. Do you prefer a product with a high ratio of labor to production
costs?
4. Are your production personnel highly skilled?
5. Are your industrial product designers exceptionally skilled?
6. Does your present equipment have a long usable life?
7. Is your present equipment largely under utilized?
8. Do you have a strong sales force?
9. Is your sales force hampered by too narrow a product?
10. Do you have strong capability in a particular technology?
11. Does your company have cash or credit resources not used in your
present operation?
12. Does your company have a reputation for high quality products?
13. Does your company have a reputation for low cost production?
Market Preference
14. Do you prefer a particular industry?
15. Do you prefer a product sold to retail consumers?
16. Do you prefer a product sold to industrial users?
17. Do you prefer a product sold to the government?
18. Do you prefer a product with long usage?
19. Will you accept a product that may be a fad item?
20. Do you prefer a consumable item?
21. Is there a distribution system (trade practice) you prefer?
22. Would you consider a product limited to a given locality? (Or a
product in demand largely in overseas markets?)
23. Is a product that requires specialty selling desirable?
24. Is a product that needs mass merchandising suitable?
25. Do you intend overseas distribution?
26. Must your present sales department be able to sell a new product?
27. Are you willing to create a new or separate marketing department to
sell a new product?
Sales Volume Desired
28. Have you determined the optimum annual volume from the product over
the next 3 years?
29. Do you have any preference for a unit price range in a product?
30. Do you have 5 and 10 year volume objectives for a new product?
31. Will this product have to support its own sales organization?
32. Will the product support its own manufacturing equipment?
33. At what volume does a product exceed your company's capability?
Product Status
34. Will you accept an idea for a product?
35. Will you accept an un-patentable product?
36. Is a non-exclusive license of a patent acceptable?
37. Are you willing to develop an idea to patentable stage?
38. Will you develop a patent without acceptable prototype?
39. Will you accept a product that has been on the market but is not
vet profitable?
40. Will you license a patent?
41. Do you insist on owning the product's patent?
42. Will you enter a joint venture for a new product with another
company?
43. Would you merge with or buy a company that has good products but
needs your company's strength in manufacturing, sales, finances, or
management?
The Product Configuration
44. Are there any maximum size limitations to a product you can
manufacture?
45. Would weight of a product be a factor?
46. Do warehousing facilities or yard space impose size limitation?
47. Does length of production time influence the desirability of a
product?
48. Have you determined your equipment tolerance?
49. Do you have adequately trained personnel to do the job?
50. Would you prefer that a product be made certain materials?
51. Are there manufacturing processes that should constitute the major
portion of a new product?
52. Are there any manufacturing processes that the product should not
have?
53. Would a product requiring extensive quality control costs be
desirable?
Finance
54. Has an overall budget been established for the new product?
55. Have separate budgets been established for finding, acquisition,
development, market research, manufacturing, and marketing the new
product?
56. Has a time period been established by which a new product must
become self-supporting, profitable, or capable of generating cash?
57. Does the new product require a certain profit margin to be
compatible with your financial resources or company objectives?
58. Has external long-range financing been explored for your new
product?
59. Is the length of the sales cycle for the new product known?
60. Do trade practices require you to furnish financial assistance,
such as floor planning or dating plans, for distribution of your product?
61. Have you determined average inventory to sales ratio for the new
product?
62. Have you determined average aging of accounts receivable for your
new product?
63. Does the product have seasonal aspects?
Profile of Product Interest
Your answers to the 63 questions above can lead to a well thought-out
guide as to the acceptability of any potential new product. A short
condensed profile helps communicate your needs. Such a profile also
indicates a high degree of professional management which sources of new
products will welcome. For illustrative purposes a fictitious sample
profile follows:
The XYZ company, a defense-aerospace oriented precision metal stamping
and machine shop, desires to acquire a product or product line to the
following specifications:
Market: The product desired is one used by industrial or commercial
firms of a specific industry but not by the government or general public
except incidentally.
Product: The product sought is one in which 60 percent of the
total direct manufacturing cost consists of metal stamping and/or
machining processes.
Price Range: Open, but preferably, the unit price to the user will
be in the $100 to $400 range.
Volume: Open, but preferably a product which aggressively marketed
will produce $500,000 in sales the first year with an annual potential
sale of 3 to 5 million dollars.
Finance: Initial resources to $150,000 in addition to present
plant capacity are available for manufacturing a new product.
Type of Acquisition: Prefer royalties to a patent but will
consider purchase of a patent, joint venture, merger, or purchase of a
company outright.
Having read the sample profile, it is suggested that you review the
preceding questions. It will become apparent that the answer to almost any
single question could completely change the profile of the product being
sought. This stresses the importance to you of a thorough analysis of your
firm's objectives and strengths as the basis for a profile of a product in
which would be interested. For example, suppose you are interested in a
product at the patent or development stage. Can your company afford to
take the risks involved? Are you prepared to meet the high costs of
development? Or does your analysis indicate you should be looking for a
fully developed product?
Suggested Sources for New Products
After having developed your Profile of Product Interest, you will have
a practical gauge against which to measure new products. Where do you look
for the products? A good idea for a new product can originate from almost
any individual. However there are a number of sources that continually
generate new products. A systematic search of these sources will almost
certainly develop a choice from a number of products, any one of which
could meet your needs. Suggested sources are:
Government-owned patents. Generally any U.S. Government owned
patent is available on a nonexclusive royalty-free basis. Some government
agencies will issue a license with some degree of exclusivity if no
license has been requested after 2 years from the date of publication of
the patent. Information on government owned patents may be obtained from
your local Small Business Administration office, the field office of the,
U.S. Department of Commerce nearest you, or by writing to the U.S. Patent
Office, Department of Commerce Washington, DC 20231.
Patent Abstract Bibliography (PAB) is semiannual publication listing
NASA-owned patents and applications for patents as a service for those
seeking new products for the commercial market. PAB may be ordered from
the National Technical Information Service (NTIS), U.S. Department of
Commerce, Springfield, Virginia 22151.
Private Patents. The Official Gazette of the U.S. Patent Office is
published weekly and lists all the patents granted by the U.S. Patent
Office. Annual subscriptions are available from the superintendent of
Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. The Gazette
contains a section the lists, one time only, patents available for sale or
licensing.
There are a number of private publications in which patents available
for licensing or sale or listed. Your local library should be able to give
you a complete listing of all such private publications.
The patent attorneys in your area are another source of new products.
Large Corporations. Most large corporations, especially aerospace
companies, develop many new products. Because of company policy, may of
these products although highly desirable are not suitable for their own
manufacturing or marketing operations. Usually the large company will
maintain a separate department or subsidiary company for the sole purpose
of finding licensed include marketing studies, manufacturing know-how, and
other pertinent information or services, which reduce the risk to the firm
seeking a new product. This is considered one of the finest source of new
products.
Inventors Shows. The Chambers of Commerce in large metropolitan
areas generally sponsor an annual "Inventors Show." The purpose of these
shows is to enable manufacturers and inventors to get together to put new
products on the market. Check with your local Chamber of Commerce for the
dates for their next show or write to the Office of the Inventions and
Innovations, National Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC 20234, for a
listing of the major inventors shows scheduled throughout the United
States.
Commercial Banks. One way to obtain a new product is to acquire all
or part of another business. Many small companies with fine products may
need the strengths of your company to become successful. These strengths
may consist of equipment, facilities, personnel, or know-how in
manufacturing, marketing, or management, as well as money.
Licensing Brokers. A new type of consultant is the licensing
broker. They generally have a wide range of acquaintances in the licensing
field. Usually they represent companies seeking licensees (including
foreign companies) as well as those searching for a product to license.
Often they also have wide experience in developing fair and reasonable
licensing agreements and can advise their clients accordingly.
Foreign Licenses. The U.S. Department of Commerce publishes weekly
The International Commerce Magazine. This contains a "Licensing
Opportunities Section" in which are listed products for which foreign
manufacturers are seeking U.S. firms to manufacture and sell these
products to the U.S. market. This may be ordered through the Department of
Commerce local field office which will also have previous issues available
for public inspections.
Also you may write a letter to your local Department of Commerce field
office and enclose a copy of your firm's brochure and your "Profile of
Product Interest." This information will be handled by their International
Investment Section which will make every effort to put you in touch with a
suitable foreign product licensor.
In large metropolitan areas, you should contact to local Commercial
Attaches at each country's embassy or consulate. They, too, are looking
for appropriate licensee for products developed in their countries.
A word of caution is in order though in such instance. You should
consult an attorney experienced in foreign licensing to prevent possible
legal complications in the licensing procedure.
New Product Advertising. Trade or industry periodicals and
financial newspapers often carry ads of new products available to a
manufacturer. These ads could very well lead you to a new product.
However, looking through such ads is a passive form of search. You might
consider advertising in these publications as an active, aggressive form
of search. A very condensed version of your "Profile of Product Interest"
should make an ideal ad.
Your Company's Brochure. Before finding a new product, you may
enter into negotiations with a number of people. To assist you in
establishing a sound relationship with new product sources, it is
suggested that you prepare a brochure on your firm. It may be very simple
or as elaborate as you wish, but it should contain: a brief history of
your firm's legal structure; information on your key personnel, plant and
equipment; descriptions of jobs or products handled and, if they are
agreeable, some of your best customers; and financial statements and
financial resources available.
Food For Thought
We've all heard, and probably said, things
like "I'm going to go on a diet as soon as summer vacation is over" or
"I'm planning to start my own business as soon as I get some money
saved."
Planning is important, but it is action that gets things done. If you
just PLAN to lose weight, or just PLAN to start a business, it never
happens. If you wait until the time is right, or all the circumstances
are in your favor, it never happens.
The way to make things happen, the way to follow your dreams, is to
take action. Today and every day. Find something you can do right now,
today, that will bring you closer to your goal. Don't put it off until
the time is right. No matter how insignificant your action may seem,
it gets you started in the right direction. Continue taking action
every day and you start to gain momentum. Before you know it, you're
in so far that nothing can stop you.
What have you been putting off? Life is too precious to spend it
waiting. Take action today. Do your dream now.
Did you know that your mind "thinks" about 60,000 thoughts every day?
Just by the sheer volume of them, your thoughts have a huge impact on
your life.
Whether you think you can or you think you can't, you're right.
Everything you do begins in your mind. Success is an inside job. You
can choose to think empowering thoughts or you can settle for limiting
thoughts. You can think the same old thoughts over and over again, or
you can expose yourself to new experiences, concepts and
possibilities. It's completely up to you and the way you choose to
think.
Look for the opportunities in every situation. Constantly think to
yourself, "I can do it." Use those 60,000 thoughts to program yourself
for success. When you believe in what you're doing, and believe that
you can do it, you'll find a way to make it happen.
The things that regularly occupy your thinking, have the power to
drive your life. Your mind is too powerful to ignore. Take control of
your thoughts and you will have control of your destiny.
Small things, repeated over and over again, are vastly more powerful
and influential than big things done just once.
One of my primary reasons for developing The Daily Motivator was the
realization that success is most reliably achieved through consistent
effort. You can go to workshops and seminars, and hear powerful,
motivating speakers. These experiences can be very influential. Even
more powerful, however, are the things you do on a daily basis to stay
focused on excellence, accomplishment, possibilities and
opportunities.
Truly successful people realize that meaningful, lasting success does
not, can not come overnight. Great accomplishments are not one-time
efforts, but rather the culmination of a long line of repeated
efforts.
The gold-medal Olympic swimmer does not just show up at the
competition and win the race. For years beforehand, she practices her
start, her stroke, her turn, her breathing, fine-tuning each aspect to
the nth degree. Often the race is won by mere hundredths of a second.
Yet the effort needed to win that race is measured in years.
Success in any endeavor comes from consistent, determined, focused
effort. The way to guarantee that you'll be at the right place at the
right time, is to be at the right place ALL the time. Stay focused
every day on the habits of success.
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