The Entrepreneur: Chris
Lawson, 35, founder of Lawson Hammock Co. in Raleigh, North
Carolina
Product Description: The Lawson
Hammock, a one-person, off-the-ground tent for campers that
features a mosquito net
Start-up: $25,000 in 1997
Sales: Approximately $150,000
for 2002
The Challenge: To market
someone else's invention when you lack your own million-dollar
idea
Chris Lawson didn't have an invention of his own, but that
didn't stop him from finding one and bringing it to market. How
did Lawson do it?
Steps to
Success
1. Find the ideal product.
Lawson felt most comfortable selling a product in a market he was
already familiar with. He hoped to find an invention significantly
different from others in the market; identify a small base of
customers ready to buy the product; ensure there was potential for
large orders, which would secure sales growth; and hold down
expenses with a product that could be easily outsourced.
The Lawson Hammock fit the bill perfectly because no one else
sold a tent/hammock, plus Lawson had no trouble identifying his
target customers: campers wanting to have a minimal impact on the
environment.
Content Continues Below
Lawson found his product through a business broker. You can find
local brokers in the Yellow Pages or on the Internet. Your
area's inventor's club is another good spot for locating an
inventor looking to sell. You can track down a local inventor's
club through the United Inventors Association) or at www.inventorsdigest.com, the Web site of
Inventors' Digest magazine.
2. Ensure the inventor is ready to sell
at a reasonable price. Lawson explains why the inventor
he found wanted to sell: "She was doing everything
herself," he says. "She sewed all the products herself.
She was just overwhelmed with the amount of work required, and she
wanted out." The inventor also hadn't invested too much in
her tent/hammock concept, so she was willing to sell the product
for a reasonable price.
3. Identify a production source that
will allow you to make a profit on the product. At
first, Lawson let the inventor continue making hammocks while he
searched for a low-cost production source. After researching other
similarly made products in the outdoor market, he found that
"most were made in Korea," he says. "So I contacted
the Korean Embassy in Washington to get a list of manufacturers. I
found one that made tents and was able to start overseas
production."
4. Look for a small market of customers
likely to generate immediate sales. Lawson sells his
product, which retails for $172, mostly to camping catalogs such as
Piragis Northwoods, through ads in Backpacking and
Sierra magazines, and at camping stores in areas with lots
of bugs, such as the Florida Everglades, Minnesota's Boundary
Waters and tropical rain forests.
5. Use word-of-mouth publicity and a
Web site to your advantage. As Lawson explains,
"The product is starting to get a reputation for quality among
camping enthusiasts, and sales over the Internet have been
increasing every year."
6. Start working on the big
customers. Lawson expects business to take off once he
lands a big account. "I've been calling on the big
four--L.L. Bean, Cabellas, REI and Eureka--since I've been in
business, and they are waiting to see how the product sells.
I've received an order from Bass Pro Shops, and I'm hoping
to add the others over the next few years." Large buyers are
reluctant to buy from a new company with few financial resources;
they're afraid it will go out of business. But if you start
calling on them early, they'll see by your third or fourth year
that you have staying power.
| HOW DO THEY INVESTORS THINK? | |
| Not like the rest of
us. An interesting book on the topic is The Patent Files: Dispatches
From the Frontiers of Invention by David Lindsay.
The book tracks down inventors of products such as handwriting
identifiers, a solar-powered interstellar spaceship and
air-purifying helmets. The book's essays are amusing, and the
author's firsthand experience with trying to get an invention
through the patent office on his own is something every inventor
can relate to. This book isn't a how-to, step-by-step approach
to inventing, but it does offer insights into how inventors really
deal with the world around them. |
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