Austin entrepreneur, Richard Trocino had a great product idea. And, like
thousands of other innovative inventors with a new product concept,
bringing that idea into a marketplace dominated by long established
brands with deep links and dominance in the retail outlets is
challenging. In these days of mega corporations and Walmarts, VCs and
small business defined by the government in the land of opportunity, one
entrepreneur with a grand idea or product may be considered by any of
those groups as irrelevant and insignificant. Another challenge faced by
small businesses in today's marketplace, like in Trocino's case, is
getting an idea produced and generating sales.
In spite of
impossible odds, Trocino's invention sells almost faster today than his
factories can produce and distribute all over the world. The established
companies that were given the opportunity to brand and produce it, now
may be wishing they had not dismissed the popular product so readily.
Not when the blogosphere is broadcasting around the globe faster and
with more range than a speeding bullet; comments appearing include;
"OHSO gets my nod for the most stylish and futuristic
toothbrush/toothpaste contraption on the market today", "The Coolest
Toothbrush Ever", and "World's Most Elegant Travel Toothbrush".
Trocino
received micro level funding to get the prototypes built and into
limited manufacturing through friends and family after attempts to
license the product to both toothpaste and toothbrush companies fell on
deaf ears. Similarly, Trocino found his innovation locked out of normal
channels of retailing without the benefits of an established proven
brand in the marketplace.
Discouraged, but undaunted Trocino
abandoned efforts to take the product to market using traditional
marketing methods. Instead, like entrepreneurs who have met with
unexpected success throughout business history he proceeded by seat of
the pants and gut instinct. Acting on a hunch, he put it out there
exclusively in the world of the internet and ignored the traditional
"wisdom" of standard marketing techniques-no phones, faxes, or printed
paper junk mail-nothing but net. A guerrilla marketer does not have the
luxury of the corporate behemoths who can afford (since it's investor's
and stockholders money not their own) to throw 98% of their marketing
dollars away on a numbers game in a business model that justifies and
covers its inherent wastefulness by overcharging those sold customers
the expenses of marketing to everyone else.
Trocino decided to be
a "Swamp Fox" marketer, like General Francis Marion who befuddled the
British in South Carolina during the Revolutionary war, and break all
the rules of modern marketing warfare. Marketing is a form of warfare
and many entrepreneurs have discovered the reality of today's business
battlefields. The corporations and financiers have in today's market
reality stacked the deck against upstart competition by raising the ante
into the game of commerce. One unnamed entrepreneurial internet advice
columnist estimates the cost of entry to even be considered for funding
by an angel or VC group at between $25,000 and $250,000. That is merely
for the development of the business plan, and pre-start up consulting,
general expenses and to purchase access to their secretive inner circle.
Trocino decided to wander into the unknown swamp of the internet and
blogsphere and see what people would do when offered his innovation
directly.
Trocino, like most entrepreneurs, is a risk taker, but like most smart
business persons likes to reduce risk wherever possible. He knew a good
concept poorly executed had little chance of success in the market, so
he took his idea to a locally based but internationally known design
firm called "Design Edge" and negotiated a co-marketing partnership for
assistance in 'packaging' his innovation. Trocino knew that people who
travel a lot would naturally respond favorably to the concept of an
integrated toothpaste dispensing toothbrush in a self contained case
that protects clothing in suitcases as well as keeps things neat and
sanitary. With the co-marketing partnership with 'Design Edge' the
product took on a new personality within a sexy futuristic design that
takes the basic utilitarian idea and wraps it in fashionability and
elegance.
Then with a few well chosen words, a friend with a good
photographic eye and a smattering of html code, Trocino put up a
website at http://www.goOHSO.com, and invited a few friends through
http://MySpace.com to look at his new line of toothbrushes. MySpace
would become the testing ground and ultimate launch pad for the rollout
of his product.
With its stylish modern design and elegant
photography, the buzz it generated in cyberspace was somewhat
unexpected. In fact, it was explosive!
Driven by the dynamics of
blogosphere where coolness and fashionability become badges of personal
taste and sophistication, the OHSO toothbrush rapidly found its way onto
the personal blogs of graphic designers, and jet setters as the coolest
thing since crystal ice. When Josh Spears, the blogger's blogger posted
his rave of the sleek product, sales and global visibility exploded.
Even the legendary Steven Wozniak, the cofounder of another innovative
product, Apple computer, is counted among the OHSO toothbrush users and
fans.
Today the product is available in high fashion boutiques in
the swanky Beverly Hills bastions of elegance and among the cappuccino
makers and executive toys on the shelves of Brookstone stores around the
country. Blogs have elevated the sensible, functional, practical
toothbrush for harried travelers into fashion statements that provide
high status and cool despite it's less than $20 price tag.
Not a
bad state of affairs for the beaming Trocino who is today expanding the
line with even more designs to satisfy the market demands. OHSO is a
product that owes its success to a seat of the pants approach to beat
the corporate gorillas with a bit of his own guerilla marketing. He
simply put it out there in the vast uncharted cyber world where the old
MBA strategies have no more influence on the hip youth market than the
full color fall outs in the increasing unread Sunday paper.
Today
freedom of the personal press in the global Blogsville rules a small
voice with a message, or product like the OHSO toothbrush, can be
magnified into a global phenomena. When people like what they see, they
tell their friends, who today are everywhere. Just like Richard
Trocino's classy and well designed toothbrush.
Viral Buzz Blogs Launches Toothbrush Entrepreneur
Labels:
Blogging
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Powered by Blogger.
0 comments:
Post a Comment