As an inventor, the desire to promote and market your product or idea is strong. You want the world to know about it, and support you. There are some huge drawbacks to that, and we’d like to explain them to you:
- If You Market Too Early, You Don’t Leave Room For Changes – If you market your product in it’s infancy, you’re promoting a look and feel that may not be as refined as your final version. Having potential customers on board and then changing everything will not look good on your brand.
- Consumers Won’t Rally Behind an Unfinished Idea – One of the biggest issues with crowdfunding is when inventors try to raise money before there is a prototype or plan in place. Using crowdfunding to get your initial capital for production is a bad idea – consumers won’t give money to a campaign that isn’t “for sure”. You need to invest in a working prototype, drawings, and a timeline so your investors feel comfortable about the final product.
- Marketing Won’t Solve Your Problems – Some invention companies will tell you that they’ll market your unfinished product for an insane amount of money, before it’s even developed! Don’t fall for this – it’s the biggest scam around. Would you buy a product based on just a paragraph of text and a computer generated image? Probably not. You cannot properly market a product until it’s completed!
In the invention process, rushing is never a good idea, no matter where you are in the process. Some of the most successful campaigns out there have a solid timeline, proper backing, a team of professionals, and goals set in place. There may be setbacks here and there, but with a concise vision, it’ll do wonders. If you take anything from this blog today, just remember this – don’t fall victim to a “marketing your dreams” scam. It won’t work. Do some research!