AtricleZine
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Marketing > Packaging Your Invention: Think Like A Consumer

Tags

  • focusing
  • potential
  • stylish package
  • consumer while

  • Links

  • Unlocking the Value of Your Customers
  • Boating in Cambridgeshire
  • Tips For Negotiating A Car Lease
  • AtricleZine - Packaging Your Invention: Think Like A Consumer

    What Makes a Good Appraisal Interview?
    WHAT MAKES A GOOD APPRAISAL INTERVIEW?Here is a tip for supervisors that will contribute to a successful appraisal interview. Give advance notice. Employees like to have advance notice of the appraisal session so that they can think about the past evaluation period from their own perspective. The prepared employee may have any number of things to share about management, the department,
    eady own with consumers. Remember, people tend to gravitate toward things they know and understand. While your invention may be at a disadvantage over established brands, don't use that as a reason to give up.

    Think about packaging this way: Imagine you're driving on the Interstate at 65 mph. The radio is on and the kids are i

    Corporation HQ in Ohio
    Ohio has 28 of the fortune 500 HQs there. Many corporations have picked Ohio for its regulatory policies in the past and Corporations have been willing to hang their hat there; some come and some go, but in this decade is the first time they have a net loss of Corporate HQs in Ohio. Some was due to the Tech Bubble where many companies dropped off. Yet the fortune 1000 listings Ohio is about e
    Turning your invention into a product takes more than just coming up with an idea. If you want to sell that idea to a company, negotiate a licensing agreement or if you're going it alone and hope to sell it directly to buyers, you're going to need packaging. It's the logical next step to create packaging for your invention's product sales sample.

    The invention package challenge It's obvious that big brand products don't face the challenges your new product will. Big brands are backed by millions of advertising dollars, or years of consumer interaction, leaving the challenge to you - the potential competitor. For an entertaining look at how different brands apply packaging techniques, watch this fun video that rethinks Microsoft packaging of Apple's iPod. However, with Apple they sell the iPod with a clean, sleek and stylish package, focusing little on the product's features and more on how hip it is for the consumer. While a joke, the video does hit a few key points you should think about when packaging:

    • Bullet point benefits and features • Show human interaction with the product in use • Keep it on brand

    When you create your invention's package, you won't be afforded the mindshare companies like Apple and Microsoft already own with consumers. Remember, people tend to gravitate toward things they know and understand. While your invention may be at a disadvantage over established brands, don't use that as a reason to give up.

    Think about packaging this way: Imagine you're driving on the Interstate at 65 mph. The radio is on and the kids are i

    Information Products as a Way Out
    Many information product authors look at booklets, audio CDs, workbooks, ebooks, and the like as a way out. It's a way out of earning money in exchange for time. It's a way out of certain aspects of customer service. It's a way out of having to be articulate and brilliant every waking moment. It's a way out of keeping someone else's schedule.In lots of definitions, yes, it is a way out
    sales sample.

    The invention package challenge It's obvious that big brand products don't face the challenges your new product will. Big brands are backed by millions of advertising dollars, or years of consumer interaction, leaving the challenge to you - the potential competitor. For an entertaining look at how different brands apply packaging techniques, watch this fun video that rethinks Microsoft packaging of Apple's iPod. However, with Apple they sell the iPod with a clean, sleek and stylish package, focusing little on the product's features and more on how hip it is for the consumer. While a joke, the video does hit a few key points you should think about when packaging:

    • Bullet point benefits and features • Show human interaction with the product in use • Keep it on brand

    When you create your invention's package, you won't be afforded the mindshare companies like Apple and Microsoft already own with consumers. Remember, people tend to gravitate toward things they know and understand. While your invention may be at a disadvantage over established brands, don't use that as a reason to give up.

    Think about packaging this way: Imagine you're driving on the Interstate at 65 mph. The radio is on and the kids are i

    Make Communication Work For You
    Jane and Bob have been working with their teams for a couple of months, and they've really paid attention to putting the right people in the right roles. However, other problems can arise that don't have anything to do with teams, leaders, and workstyles.Differences in communication styles or the communication styles themselves are often the cause of problems, rather than the content
    how different brands apply packaging techniques, watch this fun video that rethinks Microsoft packaging of Apple's iPod. However, with Apple they sell the iPod with a clean, sleek and stylish package, focusing little on the product's features and more on how hip it is for the consumer. While a joke, the video does hit a few key points you should think about when packaging:

    • Bullet point benefits and features • Show human interaction with the product in use • Keep it on brand

    When you create your invention's package, you won't be afforded the mindshare companies like Apple and Microsoft already own with consumers. Remember, people tend to gravitate toward things they know and understand. While your invention may be at a disadvantage over established brands, don't use that as a reason to give up.

    Think about packaging this way: Imagine you're driving on the Interstate at 65 mph. The radio is on and the kids are i

    The Police Debates
    When a senior officer of the Singapore Police Force (SPF) asked for my opinion about service improvement, mindset training and new technology, I became curious.I did some detective work of my own and discovered the SPF holds internal debates on provocative service questions. It’s one of the best ideas I’ve seen for developing a service culture. Here’s how they did it. You can do it, to
    consumer. While a joke, the video does hit a few key points you should think about when packaging:

    • Bullet point benefits and features • Show human interaction with the product in use • Keep it on brand

    When you create your invention's package, you won't be afforded the mindshare companies like Apple and Microsoft already own with consumers. Remember, people tend to gravitate toward things they know and understand. While your invention may be at a disadvantage over established brands, don't use that as a reason to give up.

    Think about packaging this way: Imagine you're driving on the Interstate at 65 mph. The radio is on and the kids are i

    Improving Customer Service
    Improving customer service starts at the top - with us owners and managers. We need to be living pictures of how we want our staff to treat customers. Having 10 plus years operating, owning and working in the food business and being a customer myself, I know what good customer service looks like. If I don’t place a high value on the best customer service possible, then my staff won’t make it
    eady own with consumers. Remember, people tend to gravitate toward things they know and understand. While your invention may be at a disadvantage over established brands, don't use that as a reason to give up.

    Think about packaging this way: Imagine you're driving on the Interstate at 65 mph. The radio is on and the kids are in the backseat. A big rig is attempting to pass you. Now, among all of these distractions you catch a glimpse of a billboard. You have two or three seconds to focus in on it before you've passed it. Did you get its message?

    This is a great exercise in understanding package and advertising communication. You'd be amazed how effective, or ineffective, billboards are at communicating to motorists. Apply this to packaging on store shelves. Imagine you're in the store. You are pushing a cart and you have a predetermined list of products you need to purchase. Your children are with you again and they're fussy. You have to get the shopping done and return home by a certain time to meet your schedule. You're on a fixed budget and only certain items can be purchased. In this environment, a product has even less time to communicate with a consumer. Will your invention's packaging catch their eye? Are your invention's benefits and features positioned clearly for easy reading? Will it convince the consumer that it's worth their time to stop and consider fitting it into their purchasing budget?

    If you can create shelf presence and get noticed by the general consumer, your invention's packaging will definitely communicate to corporate decision makers and retail buyers - the gatekeepers who hold the key to your produc

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.atriclezine.com/article/26238/atriclezine-Packaging-Your-Invention-Think-Like-A-Consumer.html">Packaging Your Invention: Think Like A Consumer</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.atriclezine.com/article/26238/atriclezine-Packaging-Your-Invention-Think-Like-A-Consumer.html]Packaging Your Invention: Think Like A Consumer[/url]

    Related Articles:

    What Online Millionaires Tell Me They Are Worried About

    Fit For Work - Managing Attendance In The Workplace

    3 Ingredients of Highly Profitable Organizational Change

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com