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Invention Prototype Development West Plains MO

Once you've invented a new product and are convinced that you can build a business on it, putting together an invention prototype may be necessary.

The RC Ferguson Group
(816) 547-3745
4741 Central, Ste. 307
Kansas City, MO
Karen W Levy Consultant
(314) 727-9911
8029 Forsyth Blvd
Saint Louis, MO
Leggette, Brashears & Graham, Inc.
(816) 421-7766
405 E. 19th Ave., Ste. A2
Kansas City, MO
Lee's Summit Economic Dev
(816) 525-6617
218 SE Main St
Lees Summit, MO
American Lung Association of the Central States
(816) 842-5242
2400 Troost Ave., Ste. 4300
Kansas City, MO
The Power of Goodwill LLC
(816) 941-3600
114 N.W. Teakwood St
Lee's Summit, MO
Insignia Management Group
(816) 842-1266
1828 Swift Ave
Kansas City, MO
Resources Global Professionals
(816) 360-3705
1100 Walnut St., Ste. 1750
Kansas City, MO
Lehr Construction Co
(816) 232-4431
2115 Frederick Ave
Saint Joseph, MO
BTU Consultants
636-294-717
1293 Pinehurst Club Ct
O Fallon, MO
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Creating an Invention Prototype

We got our start as entrepreneurs by inventing, developing and licensing the Battery Buddy, a device that prevents dead batteries on cars and boats. And the invention prototypes we built were critical to our success in ultimately licensing the product to a multi-billion dollar NYSE company.

Invention prototypes are crucial because they go a long way toward proving your concept to potential investors, customers and suppliers – and to yourself. Many experts agree. “The whole reason to do a prototype is that it can help you accomplish a lot without your having to invest too much in the product idea or commit to it early on,” says Bob Cannon, chief executive officer of Cannon Advantage, a management consultant in Burton, Ohio, who specializes in bringing inventions to market.

Build an invention prototype at the right time

Make sure you’re thinking about a prototype all along and that you put one together, even if it’s a crude one, earlier than you think rather than too late. That means constructing an invention prototype long before you buy tooling to build your product or seek a contract manufacturer.

You may actually want to construct a prototype even before you get too fancy with computer drawings. “You can burn up a lot of money on engineering drawings when maybe what you really need first is a chunk of papier mache that shows what you’re trying to do,” says Andrew Nolan.

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