How to Get Your Invention Idea Off the Ground

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If you are looking to get your invention idea off the ground, you need to understand the market. Then, you need to determine the legitimacy and relevance of your idea. A good way to do this is by choosing an industry or niche you are familiar with. This will make it easier for you to sell your invention to the right people and get it funded.

InventHelp

InventHelp is a company that helps inventors package and pitch their invention ideas to thousands of companies. The company has a database of companies that are interested in reviewing new invention idea, and their services are confidential. This helps ensure that your ideas get a fair shot at the market. However, there are a few things to consider before submitting your idea.

First, you need to make sure that the company is experienced and well-established. InventHelp has been around for more than three decades and has offices in 65 cities across the USA and Canada. They have a team of experts in each of their offices. This helps ensure that the company has a solid presence in many different parts of the country.

Hershey's

Milton Hershey worked seven days a week in his candy shop in Midtown Manhattan. The shop was located on 6th Avenue, between 42nd and 43rd Streets, near Bryant Park and the Croton Reservoir. He hired neighborhood girls to work in the store and also made wholesale deliveries to pushcart vendors in the area. When he first began selling chocolate bars, he called them Lancaster Caramels. After this, the Hershey family traveled to Egypt and Europe, where Hershey visited chocolate factories. It is said that Hershey learned how to make candy while in Europe.

In 1900, Milton Hershey introduced the first five-cent chocolate bar. He marketed the candy bar as a healthier alternative to meat, claiming that chocolate was good for the human body. He also branded the candy bar with his name. As a result, his candy bar became a staple of the American diet.

C.R. Bard

C.R. Bard's Invent Help idea for an intravenous stent was originally a medical device, and the company began expanding its operations internationally in the 1970s. It established joint ventures in Denmark and Japan, and in 1979 acquired the Brazilian company Rossifil Industria Produtos Plasticos Ltda. The company's growth required decentralization, and in 1980, the company created a series of divisions to design, manufacture, and sell products.

In 1923, Bard founded C.R. Bard, Inc., which sold urological devices and Eynard catheters. In 1948, Bard hired John Frederick Willits, who had worked for a medical book publisher. Willits understood that Bard would eventually turn the business over to him.

Philip Morris

While cigarettes remain the company's bread and butter, it is increasingly looking beyond traditional cigarettes for new products. It has invested billions in research and development of heat-not-burn products, and recently acquired IQOS. In early 2019, the FDA approved IQOS electronic cigarette systems for sale in the U.S. Meanwhile, Philip Morris' parent company, Altria, invested $13.0 billion in JUUL, a competing electronic cigarette brand. The move contributed to the collapse of the merger talks between the two companies.

If your invention idea is similar to one developed by Philip Morris, you may have a better chance of gaining protection under the Patent Office. The company has filed for patents to protect its products. This list includes patent applications that have been granted by the USPTO and pending patent applications.

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