Inventor Services Commission-Only

by Ronald Docie November 21, 2011

Although popular in principle, the notion that marketing services to help inventors with patents or ideas for products should be for commission-only is terribly inequitable and dysfunctional for many reasons. To my knowledge, no one has ever made a living that way unless they got lucky with one invention and used it to budget all the others.

Look at it this way. Car salesmen and real estate agents work for commission. But, with the success rate of invention marketing being so low, even on a good day, there is really no comparison in the reimbursement models. Tell me, how many real estate agents will you attractive when you tell them they will get commission on one of every hundred homes they list? Not many, if any.

If you know of any entities whom have been in business more than five years working for commission-only to help inventors, please let me know, I’ll hire them.

If you want to find the best company to license your invention, pre-qualify them, develop a licensing strategy, ascertain the potential value of your invention and/or potential international sales, and all the other things that may enter into the licensing/commercialization business decision, then you will likely have to (and should) pay a fee. But, this work is more akin to research than it is to sales.

If you want use what is learned from this research and instead, use it for the marketing section of your business plan and go it alone, you are free to do so. However, legitimate marketers simply don’t give away $10,000 to $20,000 worth of market research for free, nor should they be expected to.

Instead, some reputable service providers provide valuable market research, prototyping, product development, find potential licensees, and other such services to help inventors for a very reasonable fee, much less than a corporation might pay for a similar service. This, BTW is what Docie Marketing does to help inventors with ideas for products or patents.

In many cases you will need to purchase some type of service before you will ever know whether you have a marketable invention, or for that matter, before you ever ‘pitch’ it to a prospective manufacturer or licensee. This preliminary work supports possible future sales, but it is not the actually selling itself.

Another reason why commission services may be very inequitable is because with the low success rate, the marketer must charge an exorbitantly high commission in order to make up for all the failures. It takes nearly as much time to try to market a failure as it does a success. So if you have the lucky success, you will need to pay for the marketer’s services for dozens of failures. Sounds like the definition of socialism, if not communism to me. Not that this is bad, but every time you spread out the expenses, that’s essentially the system you are undertaking, not unlike the insurance business.

These reasons and more are why the notion of commission-only services may not be as rosy as it sounds. The problem is, most people who recommend that marketing services should be for commission-only have never marketed their way out of a brown paper bag, let alone had to make a living by commercializing inventions. Reminds me of the blind leading the blind. Don’t succumb to it.

If you want to save money and do it all on your own, I wrote The Inventor’s Bible: How to Market and License Your Brilliant Ideas, with a workbook that takes you through the entire process, step by step, for that purpose.

But remember, doing your own marketing is almost like trying to write your own patent. You may do it, and in the end wish you’d paid a professional who could have saved you time, grief and mistakes from your inexperience.  

 

(Source: docie.com)

Is a Trade Show Right for Me?

by Ronald Docie July 25, 2011

by Ronald Docie Sr.

The National Hardware Show, and Lawn & Garden Expo is held each May at the Las Vegas Convention Center. This is an international trade show, and the major US show for consumer, do-it-yourself (DIY) products sold in Lowe’s, Home Depot, Menard’s, Ace, True Value, and hardware stores throughout the USA and even internationally.

If you are an inventor of new products relating to: Hardware & Tools; Lawn, Garden & Outdoor Living; Paint & Accessories; Homewares; Plumbing & Electrical; Storage & Organization; or need help with International Sourcing, this National Hardware Show is place to be.

Most inventors think that they need a patent and a prototype before attending such a trade show. NOT TRUE. The fact is, I’ve attended these shows, while representing inventions, for over three decades – so I’ll let you in on the secrets.

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Cash for My Idea – Without a Patent

by Ronald Docie July 25, 2011

by Ronald Docie Sr

You don’t always need a patent to get your invention idea reviewed by a top company, and get it sold for cash.

For inventions that are not yet patented, or that contain trade secrets or features that are additional to the patent, I recommend considering the following procedure for submission to companies. (I am not giving legal advice, and you should always contact your attorney when you are dealing with legally binding contracts.)

I typically meet many company executives, especially at trade shows, and many are very willing to offer to sign a confidentiality agreement. They typically ask that one be sent to them at their office after the trade show. This is all fine and good, however it is my experience that 1 in 10 of these executives ever follow through with their promise. This, by itself, is not necessarily an indicator that the company is not a worthwhile candidate, for reason that I will explain later.

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FREE Download - 12 Steps to Success by Ronald Docie, Sr.

by Ronald Docie July 25, 2011

Ronald Docie, Sr.’s 12 Steps to Success for inventors may also be found at InventorInsider.com

INVENTION SCAMS UNMASKED

by Ronald Docie July 21, 2011

  

INVENTION SCAMS UNMASKED

  

By: Ronald L Docie, Sr., President, Docie Development, LLC,

© 2010 All rights reserved -

You could not create a better scenario for a scam than you have in the invention business.  The real scam is the inventor’s attitude, fueled by misleading information. Consider these assumptions. 

Assumption Number One

Arguably, 999 of every 1,000 inventions ever make it from idea stage to the marketplace.  This figure certainly could be off by a factor of 10 in one direction or the other depending on how far an idea has advanced before you start counting it, and your definition of what makes a successful invention, i.e. just to make it to the market, to make more money that what was invested in it, to turn a profit for the company, etc.

The US Patent and Trademark office at one point published that 1% or 2% of issued patents ever become a product.  Anyway you shake it, the odds are extremely high for any inventor to make a commercially successful product.

 Assumption Number Two

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Submit Ideas to Companies Confidentially

by Ronald Docie December 2, 2010

by Ronald Docie Sr

If you are seeking to license your invention to a manufacturer, it is best to submit your invention only to companies that have a positive track record of paying outside inventors for their contribution.  If a company has been manufacturing goods for fifty years, for example, and they have never paid anything to an outside inventor, why would you want to submit any invention to them, even if they do offer a confidential disclosure agreement? 

On the other hand, if a company does not want to sign a disclosure agreement, yet it has an extensive track record of paying for outside inventions, then I believe that this fact alone should weigh foremost in your decision to submit to them. This is because such a company may be an excellent candidate even though they won’t sign an initial disclosure agreement.

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Should I Patent My Idea - Invention - New Product

by Ronald Docie March 10, 2010

By: Ronald L Docie, Sr., President, Docie Development, LLC,

So, you want to sell your idea for a patent?  Here are some factors to bear in mind.

The companies who are your potential purchasers have different criteria for accepting new ideas.  Typically, larger companies demand that you have either a patent or patent pending prior to even looking at your invention.

Other small to medium size companies may be willing to look at your ideas with no patent pending and without a prototype.

In fact, one notable U.S. hand tool manufacturer accepts ideas without a patent and without a prototype. If they like it they will build a prototype, test market it within the company, and you still have the opportunity to potentially patent it on your own, AFTER you know that a company sees value in your invention and wants!

See how dramatically different these two approaches are.  One suggests that you at least initiate the substantial expense of applying for a patent, PRIOR to even submitting your invention to a company, and the other approach allows you to forego this expense until AFTER you at least get some indication as to the potential marketability and interest in your invention.

 

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The Truth about Inventor Scams: Patent Attorneys

by Ronald Docie November 24, 2009

By: Ronald L Docie, Sr., President, Docie Development, LLC

Many people think that invention submission type companies are the biggest sources for ripping off inventors. But these companies can’t even come close to taking money from inventors at a rate remotely near what inventors waste on patent attorneys to file erroneous, inappropriate, and ineffective patent applications.

Here’s how you get scammed. First you establish a profession of highly paid and powerful lawyers. Then you add a lobbying body like the APLA (American Patent Law Association) to do your gunning for you, both in Washington, and with PR. With this facade of seeming credibility, you publish material and build a case for telling the lowly independent inventors (I’m in this category, too) that the first thing you’d better do is patent your invention before doing anything else. Some go so far as to inappropriately tell the inventor that they are “protected” by the mere filing of a patent application.

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Inventors Who Want to Save the Environment – Beware

by Ronald Docie November 24, 2009

By: Ronald L Docie, Sr., President, Docie Development, LLC

In the early 1980’s, after I successfully commercialized my first invention, a blind spot mirror for vehicles, I decided I would change the direction of my business, and market ideas, patents and technology solely in the “green” categories of saving energy, helping the environment, reducing pollution, etc.

Being a successful inventor, many other inventors would approach me — some of whom had inventions that would save millions of barrels of oil, reduce C02 and other pollutions ten-fold, save energy and in general help the environment, our quality of lives and the planet.

The notion of working for inventors with such idealistic standards was exciting and encouraging.  However, being a neophyte in marketing and only in my 20s, I would have never believed what I was about to learn about marketing energy-saving inventions.

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Wisconsin Ideas to Profit Conference for Inventors

by Ronald Docie November 20, 2009

By: Ronald L Docie, Sr., President, Docie Development, LLC

This Wisconsin inventors conference, sponsored by The University of Wisconsin, Wisconsin Innovation Service Center, was held Oct. 1-2, 2009 in Dells, Wisconsin.  The conference was well attended by what seemed like 100-200 inventors as well as plenty of consultants and experts who facilitated workshops on various subjects relating to patenting, marketing, prototyping, manufacturing, raising venture capital, seeking government assistance, forming a company, commercialization, and licensing, and consulted with inventors at no charge.  If the inventor were to pay the regular hourly rate for these experts to consult with them on their invention project the cost could be $500 - $1,000 to get this level of advice.

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