Making
Money With Your
New Buisness Idea or Invention
How to Make
Money With Your
New Idea or Invention
Innovative ideas are essential to business progress. It
is very difficult, however, for innovators to get the kind of financial
and management support they need to realize their ideas.
This Guide, aimed at idea people, inventors, and innovative
owner-managers of companies, describes the tests every idea must pass
before it makes money.
You've Got an Idea? Great!
So, you've had an idea for an invention or an innovative way of doing
something that will boost productivity, put more people to work, and make
lots of money for you and anyone who back you? As you've probably heard,
you're the kind of person your country needs to compete in world markets
and maintain its standard of living. You're the cutting edge of the
future.
You are another of those individuals on whom progress has always
depended. We all know that it hasn't been huge corporations that have come
up with the inventions that have revolutionized life. As the discoverer of
penicillin, Sir Alexander Flemming, said, "It is the lone worker who makes
the first advance in a subject: The details may be worked out by a team,
but the prime idea is due to the enterprise, thought and perception of an
individual." Innovators like you are business's lifeblood.
Owner-managers who have started companies on new ideas know first hand
about the innovation process. They also know that you can expect to
hear...
You've Got an Idea? So What?
In the first place, the chances that you are the first to come up with
a particular innovation are somewhere between slim and none. Secondly,
even if you have come up with the better mouse trap, nobody - but nobody -
is going to beat a path to your door. In fact, in the course of trying to
peddle your BMT, you'll beat up plenty of shoe leather wearing paths to
other people's doors. You'll stand a good chance of wearing out your
patience and several dozen crying towels as well.
Well, new product failure rates are estimated conservatively to be
between 50 and 80 percent. One survey of major companies with millions of
dollars to spend of R & D, market research, and product advertising, and
with well-established distribution systems found that of 58 internal
proposals only 12 made it past initial screening. From these 12 only one
successful new product emerged.
Another group set up to help innovators has found that of every 100
ideas submitted 85 have too many faults to bother with. They can be
eliminated immediately. Of the remaining 15, maybe five will ever be
produced. One of those might - only might - make money.
With odds like 99 to 1 against an idea being a monetary success, is it
any surprise that your idea is greeted with a chorus of yawns? People -
companies, investors, what have you - are basically conservative with
their money. Ideas are risky.
Does that mean you should forget about your idea? Of course not. It
merely means that now you're beginning to see what Edison meant, when he
said, "Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent
perspiration."
Again, those of you who own small firms started on innovations are well
aware of the truth of Edison's words. You've been through the hard work.
Can You Exploit Your Idea?
Although coming up with what you think is a sure-fire idea is the
biggest step, it's still only the first one. You've got the other thousand
miles of the journey to success still ahead of you.
Many things remain to be done before you can expect to realize the
first dollar from your invention or other innovation. You should be
prepared for the unhappy discovery that the end of the line for your idea
may turn up well before the point you needed to reach to make money from
it.
At a bare minimum, your idea will have to pass the following tests:
- Is it original or has someone else already come up with it?
- Can someone produce and distribute it if it's an invention or other
product, or use it if it's a marketing innovation, a new use for an
existing product or the like?
- Will it really make money? (Will someone buy it?)
- Can you protect your idea?
That seems to be a modest enough list, and it is. The problems arise
from the dozens of underlying questions that must be answered before the
major questions can be resolved. Here, for example, are the 33 areas that
the University of Oregon's Innovation Center runs each submitted idea
through to determine if it has commercial merit:
- Legality
- Safety
- Environmental Impact
- Societal Impact
- Potential Market
- Product Life Cycle
- Usage Learning
- Product Visibility
- Service
- Durability
- New Competition
- Functional Feasibility
- Production Feasibility
- Stability of Demand
- Consumer
- User Compatibility
- Marketing Research
- Distribution
- Perceived Function
- Existing Competition
- Potential Sales
- Development Status
- Investment Costs
- Trend of Demand
- Product Line Potential
- Need
- Promotion
- Appearance
- Price
- Protection
- Payback Period
- Profitability
- Product Interdependence
- Research and Development
Now that is not a modest list. However, for the moment lets ignore the
33 and look at the four broad questions.
Is Your Idea Original?
Obviously, if somebody has already come up with and produced as good an
item or a better one, it would be pointless for you to pursue a similar
idea any further. You'd only be wasting your time and money.
There are lots of places to look to find out. If your idea is for a
consumer product, check stores and catalogs. Check trade associations and
trade publication in the field into which your invention or innovation
fits. Visit trade shows relevant to your idea. Look in the business and
popular press. (Here, you can consult The Reader's Guide to Periodical
Literature to help you in your search. Your public library has a copy.)
Don't be afraid to ask people in the field if they've ever heard of
anything along the lines of your idea. In the pure idea stage it's not
very likely that somebody will steal your idea - all the hard work still
has to be done. Besides, you can ask general sorts of questions and keep
the details of your idea to yourself if you're really anxious that your
idea will be pirated. Patent rights to an idea in major foreign countries
will be jeopardized by uncontrolled disclosure prior to filing a patent
application in the United States.
Obviously, if what you've come up with is an invention or an idea that
can be put into patentable form, you'll eventually have to make a patent
search. You could do that in this early stage, but it is probably a better
idea to hold off until you've taken a look at your idea in the light of
the next two questions?
How Will the Invention Be Produced and Distributed?
The first thought many innovators have is to take their ideas to a big
national company. Provide the dazzling idea, they think, and let the giant
work out the details. After all, the national company has the money, the
production capability, and the marketing know-how to make this surefire
profit maker go.
Unfortunately, the big companies are almost never interested in ideas
from outsiders. Whether that's because, as one innovation broker has
suggested, that outside technology is "a risk, a threat," or simply
because large corporations need potential sales of an item to be in the
tens of millions of dollars, doesn't matter. The cold fact is that selling
a big firm on your idea is in the 100,00 to 1 shot range.
On the other end of the scale, you may be able to produce some items
yourself, working out of your home and selling by mail order. This method
can be a good way to get started, but after a while you may find yourself
getting tired of having 200,000 better mouse traps stashed in your
bedroom.
To be sure, if you can start (or already have) your own company, you
will be better off. It's easier to sell a company than a patent, even if
the company is losing money.
Many potential buyers understand a company much better than they
understand the technology of an invention. Business people usually look at
the profit-and-loss possibilities differently from the way an innovator
does.
Many of these business people follow what one innovator has called "the
'Anyhow' theory of economics"; We have a plant anyhow. We have a sales
force anyhow. We advertise anyhow. We're smarter anyhow." Such business
people also know that by the time they purchase a company most of the bugs
are out of the technology and customers exist.
Between the extremes of starting your own company or having big
business buy you out is taking your idea to small and medium-sized
businesses. Such firms would be happy to produce an item producing sales
in amounts that simply don't interest large companies. Smaller firms may
lack marketing and distribution expertise, but again your major problem is
even finding one that can help you realize your idea and is interested in
trying.
Will Your Idea Make Money?
This is the question that worries everybody. Here is where the risk
arises that makes it so difficult to interest people in backing your idea.
It's a question that's really impossible to answer with any assurance.
After all, major corporations even with massive market studies hit
clinkers
all the time. Remember the Edsel? On the other hand, an idea so seemingly
stupid that you'd think it was somebody's idea of a silly joke might make
millions. Don't you wish you'd though of the pet rock?
So many factors need to be considered to answer this question. Is there
a market? Where is it? Is it concentrated or dispersed? Could the size of
the market change suddenly? Will competition drive you out? These
questions are by no means the bottom of the iceberg. Yet, answering the
money question to the satisfaction of potential backers is the key to the
other questions.
Can You Protect You Idea?
Once you've come up with tentatively satisfying answers to the
originality, production and distribution, and saleability questions, its
time to consider protecting your idea. After all, looks like you may have
something.
If you do have a patentable item, it's time to look into trying to
protect it under the patent laws. Here briefly are the steps you'll need
to follow:
Get a close friend (who understands your invention) to sign his or her
name on a dated diagram or written description of the invention. Or, you
can file a "disclosure document" with the Patent Office. Taking one to
these measures will provide evidence of the time you came up with your
invention in case of a dispute with other inventors over who conceived it
first. Sending yourself a registered letter describing the invention
itself is useless as evidence. Get patent protection as soon as possible.
Make a patent search to see whether or not the inventory has already
been patented in as good or better version. You can make a search
yourself. The only place to make such a search efficiently is at the
Patent and Trademark Office in Arlington, Virginia. The staff at the
Office will help you. You may find, however that the only practical way to
proceed from patent search on is with the help of a patent attorney.
If the invention has not been patented, prepare a patent application
and file it with the Patent and Trademark Office.
Again, you can do this yourself, following the pattern you find in
similar, recent patents, though, again, a patent attorney will be helpful.
If you have an attorney prepare your application, go through the exercise
yourself, anyway. Compare your application with your attorney's. Make sure
all of the points you regard as important are covered and that the
attorney has written what you want to say. Work out differences together.
Promptly file amendments or additional patent application with the
Office if you make important changes in your invention.
Having a patent won't mean you have absolute protection. In fact, one
survey found that in over 70% of infringement cases brought by patent
holders to protect their patents, the patent itself was held invalid.
Defending your patent can be very expensive. If you don't have a
patent, however the probability of successfully protecting your invention
approaches zero.
Mere ideas or suggestions can't be patented. Some of these you may be
able to be put in patentable form, but for those that you can't it's
pretty much do-it-yourself. Consult with a patent attorney or the Patent
Office about the classes of patentable subject matter.
Say, for example, you think you have a great gimmick for selling more
of Company A's products. Leaving aside the likelihood that Company A won't
be interested, how do you approach Company A with your idea with any
assurance they won't simply use it without paying a cent?
About the best you can do is write them a letter telling them you have
a promotional (or whatever) idea and, without giving them any details,
offer to send it to them. Include in your letter a statement to be signed
and returned by a Company A representative promising they won't divulge
your idea or make use of it without compensation (to be negotiated between
them and you), if they'd like to know the details of your plan. They'll
probably say thanks but no thanks or that they can't promise any such
things without seeing the idea, but it's the only course open to you.
Is There Any Hope?
Each section of this Guide seems to be packed with bad news, but the
Guide wouldn't be doing you any favors by raising false hopes. The point
is, you need to be more than an idea person to make money out of an
invention or other innovation.
Many small businesses have been doomed from the start because of false
hopes. Those of you who already operate going firms have avoided wishful
thinking in other business areas. You need to avoid it where innovation is
concerned, too.
What are potential idea and invention backers looking for? If you read
around the subject, you'll run across many comments to the effect that:
- What we want is an entrepreneur, someone who cannot only invent a
product but find capital and a way of getting the product on the market.
- It's better to have a fair new product and a great manager than the
other way around.
- Management is the most important element for success of an
invention.
Edison wasn't only an inventing genius. He was also a promoting genius,
a publicity genius, a capital-raising genius, a genius at seeing potential
markets for inventions.
Have you ever heard of Joseph Swan? A strong case could be made for
saying he invented the electric light eight months before Edison. Who got
the patents? Who got the bulb to the market? Edison. Who invented the
electric light bulb? Edison.
Few of us are Edisons. We may have brilliant product ideas, but we
aren't usually knowledgeable, let alone brilliant, in all of the areas
that need to be covered. We need help.
Where Can You Go for Help?
While you probably still have to invest considerable perspiration
yourself, you can get help with some of the sweating. Even Edison had some
help.
Patent Attorneys and Agents
Attorneys and agents can help you make patent searches and
applications, if you can't do them yourself. The U.S. Patent Office has
geographical and alphabetical listings of such people, but doesn't make
recommendations or assume any responsibility for your selection from their
lists. You can also find attorneys and agents by looking in the classified
section of your telephone directory under "Patents."
Invention Promotion Firms
Also likely to be listed in the "Patents" section of the directory are
firms that offer - for a fee- to take on the whole job of protecting and
promoting your idea. Caution is necessary in dealing with such promoters.
Federal Trade Commission investigations found that one firm, which
charged fees ranging from $1,000 to $2,000 had ten clients who made money
on their inventions - that was out of a total of 35,000. Another firm with
30,000 had only three with successful inventions. If you elect to use an
idea promotion firm, make sure:
- They don't collect the entire fee in advance.
- They will provide you with samples of their promotional materials
and lists of companies to whom they've sent it. (Then check with those
companies yourself.)
- You check the promotion firm's reputation with the local Better
Business Bureau, Chamber of Commerce, a patent attorney, or a local
inventors or innovators club.
Invention Brokers
Brokers work for a portion of the profits from an invention. They may
help inventors raise capital and form companies to produce and market
their inventions. They often provide sophisticated management advice. In
general, you can expect these brokers to be interested in more complex
technology with fairly large sales potential.
University Innovation/Invention/Entrepreneurial Centers
These centers, some funded by the National Science Foundation, show
promise for helping inventors and innovators. The best known one, the
University of Oregon's Experimental Center for the Advancement of
Invention and Innovation (The Innovation Center no longer exists), for
example, evaluated an idea for a very modest fee. The Center evaluated an
idea on 33 criteria (listed earlier in this Guide) to help inventors weed
out bad ideas so they won't waste further time and money on them.
The Center also identified trouble spots that required special
attention in planning the development or commercialization of a potential
new product. If an idea looked like it had merit and was commercially
feasible, the Center tried to link the innovator with established
companies or referred him or her to sources of funds.
Inventor's Clubs/Associations/Societies
You may have such clubs in your locality. You can share experiences
with kindred spirits and get good advice, low cost evaluation, and other
help.
Talking with other inventors is probably the most helpful thing you can
do. Find someone who has been through the entire routine of patents,
applied R & D, and stages of financing. It doesn't matter if the end
result was a financial success or failure. Getting the nitty-gritty of the
process is what's important.
Are You Being Unreasonable About Your Chances?
If you have read this Guide and still think you can make money with
your idea, some people might think you've missed the point. If you
continue to believe in your idea after looking at the odds and obstacles,
you are being unreasonable.
That's exactly what you should be. You're in good company.
All progress is made by unreasonable people. George Bernard Shaw
observed: Reasonable people adapt to the world around them, unreasonable
people try to change it.
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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