Raiser's Edge
Are your attempts at selling to retail stores going nowhere? Maybe your product needs a good fund-raiser.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2002/august/53740.html
If you're hoping to introduce a low-cost product to the
marketplace, you're in for quite a challenge. You may have
already discovered that regular sales channels are especially hard
to break into-products that sell at very low prices just don't
generate enough profit to cover all the costs retailers face when
adding a single-line product to the mix. Although the experience
frustrates many inventors, there is another option you may not have
considered: selling through fund-raising.
It's a channel that worked out quite well for Ken Joyner.
Back in the early days of his business, Joyner was convinced he had
a fabulous idea-he just needed a way to make it succeed.
After noticing customers struggling to carry awkward plastic
grocery bags, he decided to develop an inexpensive device that made
it easy for people to carry several bags in each hand. What he
invented was the Bag Grabber, a plastic holder that can hold up to
five bags at once. But while Joyner was ready for the market, the
market wasn't ready for him. Says Joyner, 38, "I had very
limited success and was only able to get the product into a few
99-cent stores in California."
A Resourceful Solution
Joyner wasn't sure what to do next when someone who saw his
product contacted him to see if she could sell it as a fund-raiser
for the PTA. "The contact told me about a regional PTA show in
San Diego, where fund-raising product suppliers set up tables with
product displays," he remembers. "I was able to pick up a
few groups [that] agreed to sell the Bag Grabber. More importantly,
I learned about the Web sites [that] fund-raising groups
[use]."
Joyner found success with two sites in particular:
www.fundraisingbazaar.com and www.fundraising-ideas.com.
"These sites are really directories where all types of groups
come to look for products to sell," he explains. "We
[received] orders from all over the country." Typically,
groups looking for products to use in fund-raising include sports
teams, churches, PTAs and scouting organizations.
Joyner found the fund-raising route a successful one for his
business. This year, his Long Beach, California, company,
FundraisingWithInventions.com, expects to sell more than 100,000
Bag Grabbers at $1 apiece as well as more than 50,000 Bag Holders,
stand-up frames that convert plastic grocery bags into garbage
bags. And Joyner expects business to get even better in the future.
"[Up until now,] I've been limited by only having a
single-cavity mold, [which only produces one product at a
time]," he says. "With my success, I've been able to
switch to a six-cavity mold, so I'll have six times as many
products to sell."
| | MOTHERS OF INVENTION | |
| Moms frequently come up
with one idea after another to make life with kids easier. But
those same moms are usually far too busy to learn how to get their
product to market. Now enterprising moms can find the tips and
assistance they need to launch their products by logging on to
www.parentwise.com. Created by Dana Lowey Luttway, the site offers
business advice and a variety of low-cost services. Lowey Luttway
is also the inventor of two successful products: the ParentSmock, a
slip-over smock to keep parents' shirts clean no matter how
much food kids pelt their way, and the StrollerStand, an
anti-tipping device that prevents strollers from capsizing when
bags are hanging on them. |
Fund-raising groups take two different approaches. The first is
to buy upfront, where the group purchases a quantity of products
and then goes out and sells them. The second is what Joyner calls
"order takers"-groups that take orders first, place
orders for products and then deliver them. "You need to be
prepared to sell both ways, as groups typically only buy one way or
the other," Joyner says. "For the order takers, you need
to have an easy-to-use sales flier with an order form on the
back." That order form should have room for 15 to 20
orders.
When pricing your product, there are two main considerations.
Typically, fund-raisers will want to triple your price. But at the
same time, while people are willing to pay a fund-raising group
more than the product is worth, there is a limit to how much more.
Usually, 50 percent more is about the limit. That means you have to
balance your price to the groups so that tripling the price
doesn't make your retail price too high.
The product's price point also affects which groups you will
attract. According to Joyner, "PTAs, sporting [groups] and
scout groups prefer a cheaper product, typically less than five
dollars, so most people will buy them. Charitable groups that
don't have the benefit of a youth sales force prefer more
expensive items to justify the effort to sell each item."
What kinds of benefits can one expect from selling through
fund-raising groups? "The biggest advantage is that you have
lots of people selling only your product," Joyner explains.
That is a big advantage over having your product sit on a store
shelf and hoping someone will see it. But this sales channel offers
other significant benefits as well. Joyner works from his home,
because he generates almost all his sales over the Internet. Plus,
according to Joyner, "You don't need as sophisticated
packaging as you do in a store, and you don't need to worry
about bar codes or in-store displays."
One last important benefit worth mentioning is that Joyner
offers his product for $1 apiece, so he doesn't have to worry
about working with a tough purchasing agent over difficult terms,
discounts, advertising allowances or other demands. People either
like your product or they don't-and if they like it, they buy.
And even better, fund-raising sales are not seasonal, as Joyner
initially thought. "Groups that do fund-raising pretty much do
it all year long," Joyner says. "There really isn't a
slow season."
Making It Work
Will your product appeal to fund-raising groups? Consider the
following criteria:
- It's needed frequently by most people. In other
words, virtually everyone has to be a potential buyer.
- It's easily understood. Kids selling products may
not be able to explain your product well, so its benefits and uses
must be obvious.
- It's extremely inexpensive. Because the people
organizing the fund-raiser will raise your price threefold or more,
you need a low manufacturing cost to make a profit.
- It's lightweight. Fund-raisers look for products
that will provide as few hassles as possible for the fund-raising
committee.
Fund-raising has worked so well for Joyner that he's even
turned his business into one that sells other products-maybe even
yours-to fund-raising groups. "Groups need different items to
sell all the time, and I want to offer the groups more
options," he says. If you have a product you'd like him to
consider, log on to his Web site at
www.fundraisingwithinventions.com. The site also offers practical
information for inventors who want to pursue the market on their
own, including a how-to booklet Joyner sells for $13.99.
If you're being stymied by traditional channels, check out
the possibility of selling through fund-raising. An army of kids
may be the best sales force you could have.
| | TRADING SPACES | |
| Online marketplaces for
intellectual property transfer have become popular because
inventors have a difficult time locating companies that are
actually looking for new products. Online listings also make it
easier for the parties to connect. One trading forum,
NewIdeaTrade.com, offers inventors and other creators of new ideas
the ability to list ideas that have either a patent or a copyright
for sale. A listing costs just $9.99 to $19.99, with all follow-up
and subsequent negotiations handled by the inventor. The site only
lists a general description of the product, and the inventor must
obtain a signed confidentiality and nonuse agreement before sharing
proprietary information with the potential licensor. Other sites
with listing services worth checking out include: www.inventorsdigest.com, www.inventionregister.com, www.inventnet.com
and www.zpatents.com. |
Don Debelak is a new-business marketing consultant and author
of Think Big: Make Millions From Your Ideas. Send him your
questions at dondebelak34@msn.com.
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