📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Entrepreneurs: Is Your Idea Ready for Prime Time? When you've got a business idea, it's easy to get excited and start talking it up to possible investors. But if it's too soon, that can mean missed opportunities.

By Carol Tice

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Is Your Idea Ready for Prime Time

When you've got a business idea, it's easy to get excited and start talking it up to possible investors. Often, this happens before the concept is fully baked. And that can mean missed opportunities.

Recently, on the History Channel reality-TV show Invention USA, one entrepreneur blew his chance to land an investment from the show's two inventor-hosts, Reichart Von Wolfsheild and Garrett Lisi.

Related: Quirky's Advice for Inventors: Study the Market

Postal worker, musician and inventor Chris Badynee created a cardboard box that is a stand-up bass and sells for substantially cheaper than a traditional bass instrument. One promising sign: Badynee has sold 2,000 of them already on his own.

In a test with three pro musicians, only one could tell the difference in sound quality. Pretty impressive for a piece of cardboard.

But there were problems.

The low-cost instrument comes as a do-it-yourself assembly kit -- and Von Wolfsheild and Lisi had trouble putting it together. Some of the pre-cut pieces turn out to be defective -- screw holes have been installed on the wrong side.

Related: The Key Question Inventors Don't Ask Before Seeking Funding

Worse, if purchasers make any error assembling the box-base, they have to buy another one and start over, as parts get hot-glued together. If the cardboard box gets damaged, you're out of luck. Clearly, the design needs some refining.

Finally, the market opportunity is fairly small. How many musicians do you know who play stand-up bass?

In the end, Von Wolfsheild and Lisi pass on investing in the cardboard instrument. If Badynee had refined his construction process a bit more before presenting his invention, he might have made a great connection with a couple of high-profile inventors with strong ties to angel investors. He may get some customers from being on the show, but the big investor who could make his product a national name remains elusive.

Related: Maker Faire and the Growth of Do-It-Yourself

Is your idea ready for investors to see? Leave a link and give us a look.

Carol Tice

Owner of Make a Living Writing

Longtime Seattle business writer Carol Tice has written for Entrepreneur, Forbes, Delta Sky and many more. She writes the award-winning Make a Living Writing blog. Her new ebook for Oberlo is Crowdfunding for Entrepreneurs.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Science & Technology

More Companies Are Rushing to Hire A Chief AI Officer — But Do You Need One? Here's What You Need to Know.

Companies are appointing executives to oversee AI. A better approach: infuse the technology throughout the organization.

Business News

Here's What Millions of Small Businesses Have in Common, According to a New Survey

A majority of the businesses surveyed, almost three in five, have been running for at least six years, and 15% were operational for over a quarter of a century.

Marketing

This Google Update Could Be Tanking Your Traffic. Follow These Steps to Significantly Boost Your Page Views and Revenue Now.

This crackdown demonstrates Google's commitment to enhancing search result quality and combating manipulative tactics like AI content spam. But it also raises an important question: How can website owners increase organic traffic significantly in this new reality?