|
Home / Business / Sales
Tips to Sell New Ideas
By:Eric Corl
A growing number of people are generating ideas not to pursue them, but sell them to those who will. This trend has led to a number of companies and services who promise the ability to sell new ideas.
Before exploring the different companies who make this promise, it is important to look beyond "selling ideas" and understand what that truly means. In order to sell an idea, what you really need is a patent. The reason for this is simple: without a patent, you have no leverage. If you listed a mere idea for sale, what is to stop someone from seeing that idea, expounding upon it in his own mind, and filing for a patent himself? If he knew enough about the idea and followed the proper procedures, he would hold full rights to the idea. You just became a middleman in a matter of seconds!
Clearly, this is not a situation you want to find yourself in. If you want to sell or license your idea, you need to patent it. This essentially means creating a proof of concept or prototype and filing it along with a patent application. Patent attorney Eugene Quinn of IP Watch dog website wrote an excellent article on how to do this called "How to Move From Idea to Patent."
Quinn's article contains sound advice on how to get patent protection for your idea. But once you have it, how do you then go about selling it? Most inventors turn to the fly-by-night "idea marketing" companies Quinn mentions in his article. This is a mistake, and it is important for inventors to understand how these companies operate.
As a general rule, these companies prey on the hopes and dreams of inventors. In shooting their infomercials and developing their websites, they know that inventors are a starry-eyed, ambitious group who wants to see their ideas succeed. But instead of providing practical, ethical, real-world advice, they lie.
They charge extortionate fees with the promise of "evaluating and marketing" your idea, but all they actually do is blast unsolicited mail to a randomized mailing list of manufacturers. Unfortunately, the final destination of this mail is the trash can. No manufacturing company worth a dime considers proposals from idea marketing companies. They are sadly more aware of their empty promises than most inventors are.
If you want to sell your idea, you should be the one to evaluate, develop and market your patent. If you think about it, you will wonder why anyone does it any other way. If you thought of the idea and know it inside and out, what do you need to pay some other company thousands of dollars for? You obviously know the market, or you would not have invented something for it!
All you truly need to do is determine which company would ideally want to sell your invention. An article called "Presenting Patent Ideas to Companies" touches on this same subject, using the example of someone who invented a new type of bicycle tire:
He might even want to go further down the chain and approach the company who creates bicycle tires, if this is a different company. The closer you can get to the physical implementation of your idea, the more likely it is that your presentation will be favorably received.
The reason for this is simple. The higher up you go, the more layers your idea will have to pass through until it reaches the people whose lives will be concretely affected by it. Not only that, but other people will not present your idea with the energy and enthusiasm that you will.
Interestingly, this is also why so many unhappy inventors report no success with "idea marketing" companies. You as the inventor do not benefit from blasting your idea out to any manufacturer who will listen. Instead, you want to focus your idea marketing efforts on a handful of carefully chosen companies who are likely to care. Fortunately, this type of research is inexpensive and you can do it yourself. Common sense and logic will tell you which company you want to try and sell your idea to.
In closing, you should patent your idea before trying to sell it because this gives you the leverage you need to be taken seriously. Then and only then should you try to sell your idea: without using listing services.
Digg
del.icio.us
Blink
Stumble
Spurl
Reddit
Netscape
Furl
Article keywords: selling ideas, invention, patent
Article Source: http://www.articles2k.com
Eric Corl is the President of Idea Buyer LLC, a marketplace for new technology and products that gives inventors the opportunity to showcase their intellectual property to consumer product companies, entrepreneurs, retailers, and manufacturers. You can email him at EricCorl@IdeaBuyer.com. You can visit the site by visiting this address; http://www.ideabuyer.com New Technology and Products, Patents for Sale.
|
|
| Top Sales Articles |
- 1). Why Use Lead Management Software? By : Halstatt Pires
Having a popular website, or popular company of any type, is entirely dependant on sales. Effective sales at that. Maintaining a healthy profit is key to the long-term survival of your web site or business and this means knowing the difference between your effective sales leads and your ineffective sales leads.
Small Business Owner
Lead management software is perfect for the small business owner or webmaster of a website.
|
- 2). Power Words By : Wendy Weiss
I conducted a teleconference a few weeks ago with people who were new in sales and new to prospecting. The focus of the call was to help participants get beyond fear and understand their prospecting process.
One of the participants on the call told me that she had been given the telephone prospecting script that her team leader uses to set appointments.
|
- 3). Secrets to Getting Paid for Your Creative Ideas and Proposals By : Kirstin Carey
Many creative professionals such as event planners, interior designers, and decorative painters are frustrated when potential clients steal their ideas and take them to cheaper companies. They present their ideas in a proposal or presentation and later find that they didn’t get the client and their designs are being used by someone else.
PROTECT YOUR IDEAS
In order to protect your ideas and still get the client, you have to change how you deliver your concepts and specifically what you present.
|
|
|
- 5). What’s the Objective of Your 1st Sales Appointment? By : Jeff Hardesty
Have you defined what you want to happen at the conclusion of your 1st appointment? Only then can you actually set up a proficient sales methodology to achieve the defined objective more times than not. And with a pre-defined objective to your 1st appointment you can (1) set a realistic benchmark of success and (2) measure the outcome. It becomes part of your sales performance scorecard.
|
- 6). Stop Cold Calling and Double Your Sales in 30 Days By : Hartley Pinn
Everyone knows what “cold calling” is, but how about “warm calling”? That’s easy, warm calling involves contacting your former clients and people you have already identified as prospects.
These are the people you had made previous contact with and are listed in your database or on your Rolodex. If appropriate for your industry, I recommend spending one hour a day calling your database.
|
- 7). Restaurant Supply a Lifesaver for Caterer By : Kingston Amadan
A few years ago, I was working as a catering manager of a local historic hotel. The hotel had been in terrible condition for many years until a group of investors purchased it and began the long arduous process of renovation. They were able to get the majority of it renovated before the funding started to run out, at which time they opened for business to offset some of the costs of ownership.
|
- 8). Employers Keep Screening Out Great Sales Candidates By : Robert Cameron
Companies hiring sales reps stick to the same old hiring practices, and hire low performers that turn over, while screening out some of the best candidates. Robert Cameron examines two hiring myths and shows you how to easily select sales people who can sell.
|
- 9). The Five Cardinal Sins Salespeople Commit By : Bill Brooks
We have very candid conversations with the sales professionals who come to our seminars and through those discussions we’ve discovered five critical errors that most salespeople make. Of course, we help them correct those mistakes, but it’s somewhat surprising as to how common they are.
Here are the mistakes, see if you commit them in your own sales career.
|
- 10). The Downlow on Buying and Selling Concert Tickets Online By : Jared Lock
Buying concert tickets online isn’t scary. In fact, it’s as easy as visiting Google and typing in the event you are looking for and follow with the word “tickets”. However, a couple of questions may come to mind when browsing for sports or concert tickets.
1. Why are tickets so expensive on the internet? On Ticketmaster the tickets are so much cheaper.
|
| New Sales Articles |
|
|
- 2). 7 Strategies for Loan Officers to Guarantee an Awesome 2006 By : Joe Pahl
With the coming high interest rate market, loan officers who follow these seven strategies will guarantee having a successful 2006. The stratgies include new technology, proper planning, business referral groups, and maximizing your "geese that lays golden eggs" among others.
|
|
|
|
|
- 5). Dealing with the RIGHT Decision Maker By : Tim Hagen
Dealing with different decision making styles and decision makers appropriately is a big part of being successful in sales. This article will provide background to the different types of personalities that can be encountered in the sales process.
|
|
|
|
|
- 8). Closing A Sale: Promise and Deliver! By : Hartley Pinn
One of the chief complaints from customers about the way business is conducted these days centers on customer service. Either the service aspect is completely lacking or what has been promised to the customer hasn’t been kept. Dealing with the latter category, it is easy to see why customers are disappointed: sales people routinely over promise and then fail to deliver.
|
|
|
- 10). Sell Services Online By : Eggbilly
Is it possible to take a normal offline service business like a legal practice, private medical practitioner or even a real estate business and make money with it from the Internet?
As someone who’s been doing this since 1996, I say the answer is a resounding “YES”.
If you are a business owner, or even an affiliate marketer, you know how hard it is to make a living online.
|
|
|