Showing posts with label Inventing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inventing. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 February 2015

Why to Try Your Hand at Inventing




How many times have you actually paid attention to all the things that surround you? Take your eyes away from the computer for a moment and take a good look at all the items that you can see from your chair. You’ll see a computer mouse. You’ll see a lamp, containing a light bulb. You’ll see a plastic bottle with a cap that contains a label and some soda. All of the things around you are monumentally more complicated than they appear. The objects did not appear out of thin air. A person or team of people had to think about the object, had to draw out a plan to create the object, and had to find a way to manufacture it.





Those people are called inventors. In history class, you’ve probably heard your teacher or professor ramble on about the historical importance of invention and they may have touched on some of the most legendary inventions ever developed. In doing this, they didn’t communicate just how important inventors are to modern society. Think about how many people were involved with the creation of that bottle of soda. Hard to fathom, isn’t it? Each part, when it was first developed, was probably vastly different from what it is now. Bottle caps were initially not made out of plastic. Soda recipes were probably revised many times before the drink that you’re sipping on became a finished product. Even the earring or earrings you may be wearing are the result of many human revisions so that their posts don’t hurt your ears.





Inventing something is one of today’s greatest miracles, and to be an inventor may be easier than you think. You could be lucky enough to have a science or engineering background and a keen eye for things that need to be improved upon. If that’s the case, you’ve probably already considered becoming an inventor, or have invented something, and hopefully have it patented. Chances are, though, that you’re not that person. You could be a housewife who spends most of her time at home taking care of the kids. You could be a trades worker who spends many hours in front of a machine doing quality inspections. Or maybe you’re a college student with a vast body of knowledge but very little idea what you want to do when you ‘grow up’. You could fall into virtually any category and successfully patent something that sells like wildfire. All you need is an idea, some passion and a plan. Most people have a subject or two they can profess they’re an expert on, and in many cases, they have opinions about how their experience with it could be improved. The opinions are the seeds that can grow you into a patent-holding inventor.





You may find the process of getting a patent and marketing a novel product difficult to understand. However, you may be comforted to know that the US Patent and Trademark Office – the regulatory center of intellectual property in the United States – approves nearly half of the patent applications they receive every year. That’s because the people who submit the applications are passionate about the product they invented and are ready to effectively prove that their creation is special. In your life, have you ever had to fight for something that you sincerely believed in? Well, the practice of inventing and patenting will tap the energy source you used to fight, and will exercise it so that you become a stronger person. Look at the invention process as a way to obtain personal growth instead of a nuisance. And remember, you aren’t alone: there are plenty of resources available to the aspiring inventor. You might just fall in love with wearing shoes like Thomas Edison once wore.


Monday, 16 February 2015

Inventing as a Home Based Business




In recent years, the ailing economy has forced a number of people to reconsider what their careers should be. Many people have been laid off or have been part of a family where one of their incomes doesn’t exist anymore. Despite the fact that there may be no work, there must be a way for a household to make ends meet. Today’s ease of communication has made home-based businesses a wonderful way to get an income.





When people consider starting a home-based business, their mind often travels to those who tutor, who are medical transcriptionists, or are web designers, all of which can use the web to advertise. What they don’t know is that there are many home-based businesses centered around one concept: invention. Inventors are critically important in today’s world, with society on a constant road to improvement. In fact, many people have probably conjured up an idea for an invention but have never followed through with constructing it. There are countless numbers of patents that are obtained every year, and many come from companies that already exist. That means if you have to stay at home and are ready to spend time on a very good idea, you may want to focus your time and energy on an invention.





An invention business may be perfect for the mom who just retired from an engineering position to raise her children. She has experience in the raw creation of things, and like all other engineers, probably has a drive to produce. Some women in this position find the fact that children are around can actually help them with the creative process. One famous inventor, Stacy Dahlman, developed a toy called Paci-Plushies. This popular toy came about when she noticed that her baby was often enamoured by its pacifier. Thinking that the baby would love their pacifier even more if a stuffed animal was attached to it, she made a small stuffed animal and tied it to the pacifier. Her baby loved it and it inspired her to consider marketing her idea. After filing her patent, she went ahead and started producing the Paci-Plushies, which has grown into a successful business.





Dahlman did not develop this toy overnight. Nevertheless, she showed confidence and had a passion about getting her product into households. It only took twelve months for Dahlman’s invention to go from idea to marketable product. What she wasn’t sure about was the budget: the cost of bringing the Paci-Plushies to market cost a whole lot more money than she initially respected. Nevertheless, returns on her product were monumental.





Dahlman’s success isn’t rare. Many people who become home-based inventors fall upon a product idea that they know hasn’t been developed. If you want to become a home-based inventor, you should should consider following these steps:





1. Brainstorm. Get a pen and paper and look at your surroundings. Think of the things that you like to do and the reasons why you don’t like it better. List what you think you could feasibly develop.



2. Get on the web or go to the library to see if your idea has been thought of, and a related product has been produced.



3. Consider following the patent process so that the idea will be yours and only yours for a long time.



4. Develop a business plan. Be sure to be clear how long it will take to make this invention, how long it will take to get a patent and how you plan to spend your money and time.



5. Consider how you’re going to market your invention. Answer questions like ‘Who would be interested in this?’ and ‘How can these people be reached?’



6. Think about whether you want to sell the invention or develop a business out of it. Some inventors fall in love with the process of inventing, and do not want to focus their time selling their first invention. If this is the case, they often sell the patent for their invention to someone who has the resources to market it.





Most importantly, keep your family and home life in mind. If you work at home, you’ll have distractions and commitments you might not usually have. Find ways to work them into your inventing schedule. And don’t forget to have fun!