Product Development The Easy Way
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Title: Product Development The Easy Way
Word Count: 1103
Author: Joe McVoy
Email: joe@joemcvoy.com
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Product Development The Easy Way
Copyright 2006 Joe McVoy
Here’s how to create successful new products if you’ve
never had an original idea in your life. I'm not very
creative, so that’s the only way I could create any
products at all. All I’ve done is to create new products
by improving on an existing product that already sells
well. By doing this I’ve sold over $39 Million of products
to major retailers.
Improving on existing products takes most of the risk away.
With a totally new invention or completely new product,
you don't know at first whether it will sell. If you
start with something that sells well already and you make
it a lot better, you don’t have that problem.
Here’s a story that makes the point:
When I started my first business, my partner had a small
screen printing operation and we set up a joint venture
together to explore products I would create and sell and he
would make. He was selling souvenirs and a popular look at
the time was to make decals out of prismatic vinyl. (This
a metallic material with a pattern embossed into it to
reflect light into rainbows.)
Though I started by selling souvenirs, before long I
noticed there were hundreds of companies starting to make
stickers for kids and they were collecting them. (Note
how quick I was to see this - after 100 other companies
were already doing it!).
Most of these stickers were just traditional paper, so I
decided to try our prismatic material and see how it would
sell. We put a product line together of prismatic stickers
on rolls and started selling some gift shops.
Sales were incredible.....
They sold better than anything else in the store so we
decided to make some more - and amazingly, they sold well
too.
The next step was to put these same stickers in packages to
sell to the major chains. Long story short, in another
couple years we were in Wal-Mart, Target, K-Mart, and about
every other major retailer and we were selling over $1.0
million of stickers every month!
ANOTHER EXAMPLE
A few years later, I started another company selling school
supplies exclusively to the major chains. We came up with
an entire line of folders, notebooks, pens, pencils, 3 ring
binders all with the prismatic/holographic look.
All I did is take the look that worked on stickers and put
it on another kids product. And that’s not all - I went to
companies who already knew how to make all these products
and had them made with our holographic look.
Result - another multimillion dollar success. This one
even got us the "Best New Vendor of the Year" award from
Target’s stationery & school supply department.
AND ANOTHER
I wasn't done yet - I had also discovered that kids
stickers were sold to the medical market as give-aways for
pediatricians, dentists and others to give to kids when
they came in to their offices.
The products being sold at the time were all plain paper
circles just like the retail market had been 5 - 6 years
earlier. This time I started a mail order company to sell
the prismatic look stickers to medical offices.
Another success....
After we grew to having over 10,000 medical offices and
hospitals as customers, I sold this company to a larger
competitor.
All in all, 3 national businesses founded and grew from one
simple idea applied over and over.....make an existing
product better.
Start with this concept - make an existing product better.
But instead of depending on the consumer acceptance of the
improvements like I did with the examples I gave you, how
about making it cheaper too!
The examples above actually cost more than our competitors
- in some cases as much as 4 times as much as the paper
products we replaced. Retailers were initially very
skeptical that the products would sell because of that.
For example, a typical paper portfolio printed in full
color with attractive designs was selling for 59 - 69 cents
for the nice ones and as low as 29 - 39 cents for the
budget models without any art.
Our portfolio was to retail at $2.00!
Though they sold better than everything else, there was
quite a bit of initial buyer skepticism because of the
price.
Here's how to make it a sure thing......
MAKE IT BETTER, FASTER & CHEAPER
When you make the changes to improve the product, do it for
less money, not more! And I don't mean just a little bit
better either - make it a lot better.
A couple examples will show you what I mean.
By watching the trends in my raw materials, I found out
right away when the prismatic and holographic materials
started to be made of paper instead of vinyl or polyester.
At the same time thin film technology appeared to make the
brighter film products much thinner to match the paper
costs.
Using these new materials I introduced a seasonal product
line of Christmas address labels, gift tags and stickers.
What made these different was that while my earlier regular
sticker product was a 4" x 6" sheet of stickers retailing
for $1.00, I was now able to do a 8" x 10" sheet of
stickers for the same price!
This was over 3 times the stickers for the same price!
What do you think happened? If a small sheet sells well
for $1.00, how will a package 3 times the size do at the
same price?
How about a $592,000 order from Wal-Mart?
ONE MORE...
This example is not about one of my products. It’s from an
inventor I know in Canada who has a process for making
plastic and rubber products from recycled tires and scrap
plastic.
He started first with those rubber protectors for ice
skates. The existing products on the market wore out fast
because the sharp ice skate blades kept cutting through the
rubber blade covers.
His product was actually more durable and lasted much
longer.
But here's the best part:
Because he used scrap material he gets his raw materials
for free! Not only did he make a better product, but
instead of a $6.00 retail price, his product retailed for
$2.00 and he put all his competitors out of business!
THE BOTTOM LINE
You don’t have to be an inventor to develop new products -
in fact, it’s better if you aren’t that smart. It’s a lot
easier to take something that already is selling well and
make it better - and it’s a lot more likely to be
successful too.
About the Author:
Joe McVoy is a consultant who has started up & built 4
national businesses. He founded 2 companies selling to
Wal-Mart, Target and other retailers, a mail order company
and an Internet information marketing business. He helps
clients with marketing, direct marketing, on-line marketing
and has a free help at:
www.profitablemarketingsystems.com
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