Is crowdfunding right for inventors?

Compartir en:

Crowd funding is not right for most inventors. In this video Andrew does a deep dive into the reasons and gives you a much better alternative. The alternative is licensing. With licensing, you get the money, the workforce and the distribution all in one place with very little risk. And you don’t need to start a company. But you can still go big with your invention ideas when licensing. Actually much bigger than you could on your own!

How do you license an idea? How do you patent an invention? Learn how to become a profitable inventor and earn passive income from your creativity following the advice of inventors Stephen Key and Andrew Krauss. They are the world’s leading experts on how to license a product idea. If you have an invention idea, inventRightTV is the show to watch.

Stephen Key and Andrew Krauss are the cofounders of inventRight, a coaching program that has helped people from more than 65 countries license their ideas for new products.

http://www.inventright.com

If you have questions about how to invent, how to be creative, design, how to do market research, prototyping, manufacturing, negotiating, pitching, how to sell, how to cold call, how to reach out to open innovation companies, licensing agreements, non-disclosure agreements, patents, copyright, trademarks, and intellectual property in general — subscribe to inventRightTV! New videos every week, including tons of entrepreneur success stories.

Inventing can be lonely, but you don’t have to go it alone! Join the inventRight community for priceless inventor education, mentorship, support, accountability, hand-holding, honesty about the invention industry, and so much more.

Contact us at #1-800-701-7993 or https://www.inventright.com/contact.

This is the book you need to license your product idea: “One Simple Idea: Turn Your Dreams Into a Licensing Goldmine While Letting Others Do the Work.” Find it here: http://amzn.to/1LGotjB.

This is the book you need to file a well-written provisional patent application: “Sell Your Ideas With or Without a Patent.” Find it here: http://amzn.to/1T1dOU2.

Determined to become a professional inventor? Read Stephen’s new book «Become a Professional Inventor: The Insider’s Guide to Companies Looking For Ideas»: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1653786256/

inventRight, LLC. is not a law firm and does not provide legal, patent, trademark, or copyright advice. Please exercise caution when evaluating any information, including but not limited to business opportunities; links to news stories; links to services, products, or other websites. No endorsements are issued by inventRight, LLC., expressed or implied. Depiction of any trademarks/logos does not represent endorsement of inventRight, LLC, its services, or products by the trademark owner. All trademarks are registered trademarks of their respective companies.

Reference on this video to any specific commercial products, process, service, manufacturer, company, or trademark does not constitute its endorsement or recommendation by inventRight, LLC or its hosts. This video may contain links to external websites that are not provided or maintained by or in any way affiliated with inventRight, LLC. Please note that the inventRight LLC. does not guarantee the accuracy, relevance, timeliness, or completeness of any information on these external websites. The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.

Compartir en:

15 comentarios

  1. Vee Soho

    Thank you Andrew, also,isn't broadcasting your idea publicly after with in the year of filing your ppa renders it public property ? Did i get this wrong?

  2. CL

    For these crowdfunding campaigns, you must fork over Around $5k to make a decent promo video.

  3. Runners Luck

    You know that if you're getting such good information in such short videos theres some real value here. I really appreciate the professionalism here and getting straight to the real information, something really lacking today.

  4. Todd Maggio

    Thank you for this advice. It was very useful. How do you approach companies to license your product? Also how much royalty you ask? Can you get a certain amount in advance and a percentage of sale/profit? What is the regular percentage?

  5. James Graham

    If I acquire a legitimate Patent through a licensing agreement and partnership with a manufacturer and a competitor tries to infringe on said patent, Am I responsible for trying to protect it ?

  6. 𝕯𝖆𝖕𝖕𝖊𝖗 𝕯𝖊𝖆𝖓

    So Andrew. Do you apply for a PPA for your idea, before you approach the companies that might be willing to product license your idea? Or do you do it, after you get commitments from the companies? 🤔

  7. quicklykay

    Andrew, Will your coaches tell a student upfront if they think a particular idea or invention won’t fly & why? Thanks.

  8. Richard Miklos

    I have an idea for a board game. Are they something that you work with or are board games another category? Do you have any helpful resources for game ideas? Can you do a video on board games? Thanks.

  9. Stefan Zoric

    What should i do If a potencial licensee ask to see my PPA?

  10. Jim McClinsey

    My biggest issue with crowdfunding is definitely the public disclosure and being knocked off. Venturing is too rich for my wallet. I’ll stick with licensing.

  11. Roaming Tortoise

    Your points definitely make sense. Question Can you crowdfund for help purchasing something like a 3d printer?

  12. Antoinette Moore

    I heard that you need raise an average of $500,000 to $1,000,000 from angel investors to launch a new product, crazy!. I would love for you to do a video on angel investors as well. Great content as always.

Deja una respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *