F
Free Radical
- Original Poster
- #1
Perhaps this will sound familiar, and if you have overcome this barrier I'd love to know how.
So I have an idea, it seems a real seller, the market seems obvious. Initial primary research seems to confirm this. The market size for this product category is large, as is the potential return. Initial patent searches are encouraging, but the official IPO search follow tweaking by product designers. High St shops would love to stock such a product (assume for argument sake I've asked them, I plan to approach them shortly)
The following steps I can achieve myself before approaching investors. These steps are:
1. Professionally designed prototype
2. Feedback from professional users
3. Patent filing via patent attorney (assume the IPO accept as new and original).
4. Generally investing every bean to my name to prove own faith in the project.
This is the point I, and I assume others, have hit a brick wall. The project requires further funding at this point due to the escalating patent and manufacturing costs. But the problem is:
1. Investors want to see an experienced manager at the helm, not me. They want someone who's launched products before or worked in the industry to which the product relates. I'd love to have such experienced partners, but if one required experienced partners to get experienced partners then there's a problem.
2. They want to see proof of demand. They want to see orders so there's no risk whatsoever. Well, if I was at that stage, selling equity would be the last thing on my mind.
Frankly, I'm not after an investors money. I believe I can raise what I need on my lonesome though I'd be living like a beggar and the process would be riskier, stressful, and error prone. What I do need is an experienced partner.
If this sounded like you, how did you get your break, or did you just soldier on and persevere?
So I have an idea, it seems a real seller, the market seems obvious. Initial primary research seems to confirm this. The market size for this product category is large, as is the potential return. Initial patent searches are encouraging, but the official IPO search follow tweaking by product designers. High St shops would love to stock such a product (assume for argument sake I've asked them, I plan to approach them shortly)
The following steps I can achieve myself before approaching investors. These steps are:
1. Professionally designed prototype
2. Feedback from professional users
3. Patent filing via patent attorney (assume the IPO accept as new and original).
4. Generally investing every bean to my name to prove own faith in the project.
This is the point I, and I assume others, have hit a brick wall. The project requires further funding at this point due to the escalating patent and manufacturing costs. But the problem is:
1. Investors want to see an experienced manager at the helm, not me. They want someone who's launched products before or worked in the industry to which the product relates. I'd love to have such experienced partners, but if one required experienced partners to get experienced partners then there's a problem.
2. They want to see proof of demand. They want to see orders so there's no risk whatsoever. Well, if I was at that stage, selling equity would be the last thing on my mind.
Frankly, I'm not after an investors money. I believe I can raise what I need on my lonesome though I'd be living like a beggar and the process would be riskier, stressful, and error prone. What I do need is an experienced partner.
If this sounded like you, how did you get your break, or did you just soldier on and persevere?
