Low cost invention strategies do exist, you don’t need a mammoth staff or an elaborate office to make millions from your invention.
L{Don Debelak’s new book, Turning Your Invention into Cash is now available on Amazon for $3.49. Go to Amazon.com and enter inventions Don Debelak to purchase. From the author of Entrepreneur Magazine’s Bringing Your Product to Market.}
By Don Debelak
How is the inventor doing today
Note: This article first appeared about 15 years ago and Vancouver Tool Company is still going strong. Check out their web site http://www.vancouvertool.com/
The Inventor: Andrew Dewberry, 43, founder of Vancouver Tool Corp. in Vancouver, British Columbia. He runs the business with his wife, Jayne Seagrave, 42.
Product Description: Dewberry’s company specializes in home-renovation products, such as the Caulk-Rite, a tool launched in 1996 that allows users to create a perfect bead of caulk. Subsequent inventions include the Caulk-Away, the Caulk-Injector, Grout-Out and Grout-In.
Start-Up: $14,000, which paid for prototypes, a two-cavity mold, patents, and a run of 3,000 units of Caulk-Rite
Sales: Approximately $1.4 million in 2003
The Challenge: Achieving million-dollar sales despite a minimal investment and a staff of only himself and his wife
When you dream of running a million-dollar business, chances are you envision employees, cubicles, an HR department and so on. But what if you could have that dream business, without any of the personnel headaches? Andrew Dewberry lives that dream-today, he and his wife, Jayne Seagrave, run a busi-ness that sells the home-improvement products he’s invented, and they do almost everything themselves. By taking advantage of outsourcing and keeping costs down, this husband-and-wife team is able to focus on running the business without being sidetracked by personnel issues. Here’s how they made it happen:
Steps to Success
1.Do the early steps yourself. Dewberry’s first product was made out of an acrylic plastic, and he made all the prototypes himself. According to Dewberry, money-saving measures have always been part of the mix: “I’ve taught myself how to do the 3-D drawings manufacturers and machinists need, and I can make a model of a steel part out of aluminum first to keep the costs down.
2.Partner with someone who complements your talents. Dewberry is an inventor, not a marketer or salesperson. So when it came to selling the Caulk-Rite, he turned to his wife for help. Although she was a criminologist, not a salesperson, she was willing to make those first sales calls. Jayne started out selling six to 12 Caulk-Rites to a local hardware chain,” says Dewberry. “Her big break occurred a few months into the project at a local hardware show, where she sold our entire production [run] to four hardware store chains.”
3.Outsource as much as you can. According to Dewberry, Vancouver Tool saves money by outsourcing “the production, the blister-pack manufacturing and the assembly. We outsource everything but the paperwork and billing.”
4.Have multiple supply sources. “We have three vendors that make the product, two that assemble it, two that do the shipping, and one that makes the blister pack,” Dewberry says. Having several vendors keeps prices down and protects you if one vendor goes out of business or has production or quality problems. Dewberry uses Canadian vendors: “[They] might not be as inexpensive as overseas manufacturers, but they allow me more control over my business.”
5.Consolidate distribution. The cost and effort involved in selling to an independent retailer can be every bit as big as selling to a large company. You’ll have far fewer headaches and costs if you sell direct only to big customers and sell to everyone else through distributors. Dewberry made this move in 2002. “There was a lot of consolidation going on in the industry, so [our] customers were not upset,” says Dewberry. “This move significantly cut both our number of shipments and our paperwork.”
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