I Needed That
Looking for an innovative product customers will buy? Think of what you need in your work or hobby.
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Where is the next million-dollar idea hiding, just waiting to be
discovered? In many cases, it could be right under your nose--at
your place of work, or perhaps as part of your favorite hobby.
Inventors who work ideas gathered from jobs or activities
they're familiar with are most likely to find success, for a
variety of reasons: For one thing, the inventor really understands
what target customers want because he or she is also part of the
group. Second, because the inventor is already familiar with the
products currently on the market, he or she can usually introduce a
product that doesn't have much competition. And finally, when
selling the product to customers, potential buyers perceive the
inventor not as a salesperson, but rather as "one of us."
It's a powerful situation that doesn't necessarily
guarantee success, but it's definitely as good as it gets. On-the-Job Training When you know a particular industry inside and out, you have the
opportunity to innovate solutions to major problems. Case in point:
Dan Tribastone, 37, who started out with an aerial photography
business. After realizing he'd need to supplement this income,
Tribastone went to work as a paramedic, and eventually he ended up
working as a registered nurse (RN) in an orthopedic operating
room. Content Continues Below
Back in 1994, Tribastone found that opportunity and
entrepreneurship collided in those operating rooms. It was there
that he realized the serious shortcoming he eventually fixed.
Specifically, during orthopedic surgery, the body part undergoing
reconstruction is constantly flushed with water. As Tribastone
describes it, "The spent fluid was collected in small
containers. An operation could produce 75 to 100 liters of fluid,
[which required 25 to 35 canisters]. Nurses were constantly having
to disconnect and reconnect containers." The containers were
connected to two lines--one to the hospital's vacuum line, and
the other to the drainage tube from the operating table. Nurses
typically had to make 150 to 200 new connections to the waste fluid
connectors during every single procedure. Tribastone thought the problem could be fixed by purchasing
larger containers. But after scouring RN trade magazines, he
realized such a container didn't exist. So he requested samples
from container manufacturers he located in a resource book called
the
Thomas Register of American Manufacturers. "I got dozens
of samples, most of which collapsed from the vacuum pressure,"
he explains. "But finally, I was able to find a steel
container that held up. I added two connection ports and started to
use them at work." The containers were a big hit in the operating room, cutting the
number of changes required to a fifth of what it had been, so in
1995, Tribastone decided to place a small ad in the Operating Room
Nursing Journal. When he got $1,000 in orders, Tribastone was
convinced he had a winner. But long days in operating rooms and
nights spent in his basement workshop took their toll. "One
day, one of the doctors told me I looked terrible and asked me if I
was all right," he remembers. "I explained what I was
doing at nights, and the doctor thought I had a wonderful
idea." That same week, the doctor set Tribastone up with an
investor, and by 1997, Tribastone started selling the product--a
disposable 3.5 gallon Omni Jug canister priced at $25. The next
year, his company, Waterstone Medical in Falls Church, Virginia,
sneaked into the black. In 2001, sales approached the $5 million
mark. One of Tribastone's biggest advantages was that he truly
understood how customers would use the product. "Sales were a
lot easier when customers realized that I came from the operating
room trenches," he says. According to Tribastone, that
experience also paid off at trade shows such as the one held by
AORN (Association of Operating Room Nurses): "Nurses
immediately recognized I wasn't a smooth-talking salesman, but
instead was really just one of them." | | Meet your maker | | | If you don't have the
resources to manufacture your new product, look into the services
offered by a job shop. Job shops
manufacture products for outside businesses and often specialize in
prototypes or small production runs,
which usually occur during a product's early stages.For more
information on job shops as well as a listing of those in your
area, log on to Job Shop Technology. The
site has a listing of job shops organized by location, and it also
lets users search for manufacturers by type. Perhaps the best
feature for inventors is that the site has magazine articles that
explain various manufacturing methods
and discuss what might be best for your product. Also included is
information on sources of virtual and actual
prototypes. |
Originally published in the May 2002 issue of Entrepreneur Magazine
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