I'm not sure i fully understand your question. What is your question about the guitar? Can you be more specific?
Keep Inventing,
Stephen Key
http://www.inventRight.com
1-800-701-7993 ...
By: Stephen Key
on
7/24/08 at 1:43 PM
Is Your Product Easy to Manufacture?
America's Best Companies ...
By: Sarah
on
7/24/08 at 11:37 AM
Got Blog Block? Start Here to Break Through
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By: Sarah
on
7/24/08 at 11:35 AM
Got Blog Block? Start Here to Break Through
Hi Tim,
Nice work keep it up
Daniel J. Ostrus ...
By: Daniel J. Ostrus
on
7/22/08 at 6:12 AM
How to Prove a Market Exists for Your Brand New Product
Zenobia is fantastic! The book engages the reading with a tale of one woman's crusade to simply find a room within a dark corporate labyrinth of unaffected and unmotivated employees, layers of bureaucracy, divisions residing within uncommunicative silos, and a culture of avoiding change of any sort. In a fun story-based plot line, Emmens manages to provide real insights and actionable success drivers. From a personal standpoint, the book highlighted how enthusiasm and action can be powerful drivers to change even the most staid corporate environment. I am handing the book out to my department leaders, and I say with conviction reading Zenobia will have an impact on both your business - and your life.
By: Troy Jensen
on
7/20/08 at 5:25 AM
Zenobia: The Curious Book of Business by Matthew Emmens and Beth Kephart
The spun version that is. A few years ago I **briefly** subscribed to a product called "Article Bot" just to experiment with it and to see how these software products worked. They operate under the assumption that there are really no original ideas out there and it's ok to swipe content off the web as long as your reform it. Aside from the ethical problem there, the software reforms it via a thesaurus-type database and it produces nonsense like the example you gave. I quickly learned that you would have to spend so much time manually tweaking the spun content that you may as well write your own version of it (or else end up with some piece of garbage paragraph that doesn't make much sense). I'm sure few people (if any) actually read the spun versions so it's kind of like Graffiti on the web. I'm almost afraid to look to see if I have any.
...
By: Frank Ross
on
7/14/08 at 5:38 PM
Article Spinning Software Should Be Banned!
it makes sense on the why this idea and not something else from the easy to manufacture and preexisting market (granted you've leveraged it into new channels; e.g., 7-11). I even get the versioning ala licensing with other brands like Disney, but how about with the guitar ... is that "just" a licensing of your brand and not a manufacturing decision like with the picks (and doesn't come with the same $$ risks)?
By: Chris Miller
on
7/13/08 at 1:52 PM
Is Your Product Easy to Manufacture?
Quite frankly i just wanted to try manufacturing a product on my own. I'd licensed products for over 25 years and i wanted to try something new. The picks were cheap to make and one other guy was selling unique picks that confirmed there was a market for such a product. This showed me that there was most likely a market for my pick idea.
So. . .cheap product to make. Confirmed market. I figured my guitar picks were a good one to start with. Seemed like a low risk endeavor and I like low risk. So I moved forward.
Keep Inventing,
Stephen Key
http://www.inventRight.com
...
By: Stephen Key
on
7/11/08 at 9:15 AM
Is Your Product Easy to Manufacture?
Your welcome luke. We love doing the free conference calls you mentioned for inventors.
Keep Inventing,
Stephen Key
http://www.inventRight.com
...
By: Stephen Key
on
7/11/08 at 9:06 AM
How to Move Forward After the Fallout
Thanks for the feedback Charlie. There is a big difference between being an Entrepreneur or an Inventor and I'd never seen anyone write about it before. Glad you liked the article.
Keep Inventing,
Stephen Key
http://www.inventRight.com
...
By: Stephen Key
on
7/11/08 at 9:01 AM
Are You an Entrepreneur or an Inventor?