Very helpful video! I'm sure it will inspire many. One of my very favorite things to do is buying cheap (most of the time, anyway) things, destroying them and incorporating into something new. Just prove easily manufactured, inexpensive and functional! 👍👍
Love the acronym MVP. Hadn't heard that one previously. Holding one in my hand right now. Small thin sheet of plastic, small stainless steel part from an existing kitchen product and some glue and duct tape. Fully MVP! 😁But, so many other ways to make this product and/or enhance it.... Now, confidentially sharing with a few pros in the field before moving forward, to get their take on usefulness and find out if they know of any existing products. I haven't any found killers yet.
Hi @virendraramlakan2511, thanks for watching! I'm not sure I understand your question. Licensing is when you have a patent, or patent pending on an invention, and then allow a company to make and sell your product under their brand. Of course, they pay you for that right. I'd be happy to explain it more on a free call if you like. You can book that here: theinventionaccelerator.com/
Very helpful video! I'm sure it will inspire many. One of my very favorite things to do is buying cheap (most of the time, anyway) things, destroying them and incorporating into something new. Just prove easily manufactured, inexpensive and functional! 👍👍
It's so much fun, isn't it?! Thanks for watching and your comment!
Love the acronym MVP. Hadn't heard that one previously. Holding one in my hand right now. Small thin sheet of plastic, small stainless steel part from an existing kitchen product and some glue and duct tape. Fully MVP! 😁But, so many other ways to make this product and/or enhance it.... Now, confidentially sharing with a few pros in the field before moving forward, to get their take on usefulness and find out if they know of any existing products. I haven't any found killers yet.
@@garycasper8141 Nice! Simple and smart process, I love it!
Very well explained. Thank you
Thanks for watching!
By "license your product " do you mean patenting it?
Is it possible to register a product as your idea, without actually patenting it
Hi @virendraramlakan2511, thanks for watching! I'm not sure I understand your question. Licensing is when you have a patent, or patent pending on an invention, and then allow a company to make and sell your product under their brand. Of course, they pay you for that right. I'd be happy to explain it more on a free call if you like. You can book that here: theinventionaccelerator.com/