Need opinions on a product I have been selling
Hello all once again! I have been selling a product since 2008 or 2009 that uses the SX 28 chip in an automotive application. Since this was a hobby and I have no extra cash, I never got the product patented. Now in 2012, I have some serious competition who has hit me hard in price. Basically, $90 per sale loss to match is price. I can't get my product cheap enough to compete with them so now I don't know what to do. It's like they want me to "close my doors" so they can have it all. I do have an excellent reputation for my product and it is widely known in the car community I am in. This is an extremely hard decision and I don't know what to do....should I count my losses and say it was fun while it lasted? Switching to the prop is going to be more expensive for me since the chip is more expensive and the eprom is an additional charge added to it. Any way I have thought out is more expensive unless I have thousands of dollars to buy large quantities of everything. Any feedback on what I should do?
Comments
One aspect to exploit is that you have the quality, reputation and history of your product. You didn't share enough about the product, marketing, support and presentation to let us know if you've already assembled a professional presentation that conveys what you're offering. Are you doing all of this the best it could be done? Have you hired professionals for the web site, for example? Does the presentation look like an engineer was doing marketing - poorly - or does it reflect the physical existence of a company with expertise and a track record?
Also, how about this idea - make a revision to the product! We have a very successful product you probably own: the BOE. Soon we will release the PropBOE with a load of features. It'll come out about the same time as the multi-platform compiler, a new educational program, and it can also be placed on the Boe-Bot chassis. The popularity of the first product guarantees a certain level of success for the next version. Can you make a new edition of the product? Making a Revision B is the way to sell it to the same customers who bought Revision A.
I'm confused about the cost part. We still have hundreds of thousands of SX chips and you can have them for our cost. There's no need to switch to the Propeller unless you can add features to the product that it doesn't already have. Can you add video output, simultaneous processing benefits (are you counting a tach or managing fuel injection?), or other benefits that the competitor doesn't already offer? Are they just a straight clone of your design? No choice of processor can knock $90 off your cost.
Buying lots of inventory isn't always a good way to reduce your costs. Once in a while we do this, but it's not a good practice unless you have a guaranteed ROI in a given amount of time (and no better use for the cash).
I'm sure there's much more we could offer if we had a look into the actual product. I think the questions you ask are highly relevant, very important, and demonstrate the backbone of an innovative spirit.
Ken Gracey
You could pull back from the distribution and sell direct at a lower price for a while, running the product through the rest of the life cycle. I'm willing to bet that if your competitor jumps into the existing distribution channels his price will increase and your version will be less expensive since you'd exclude distributors. Is that a possibility?
If you didn't bother with FCC compliance and he didn't either (and it's required) then you wouldn't want to open up that barrier.
I'm assuming that this product sells for something between $200 and $300. I think the $90 price reduction the competitor offers is a function of direct sales vs. your model through distributors, which requires a higher price. I doubt he can make the same product for $90 less, but I imagine he could sell it for less since there are no distributors.
Are there improvements you could make to the product to release a new version? It doesn't sound like it from your description. It appears to be a solution to a problem more than a feature-rich must-have. Maybe you could confirm this as a fact.
Maybe a company like Banks?
Also about the website design thing... I have been website programming for 11 years and used to be self employed making money from my websites
<<<It's like they want me to "close my doors" so they can have it all. I do have an excellent reputation for my product and it is widely known in the car community I am in. This is an extremely hard decision and I don't know what to do....should I count my losses and say it was fun while it lasted?>>
IMHO, not knowing what you have done, but my own answer would be "HELL NO!!!!!" Play their own game against them. This product is not the thing keeping food on your table etc, so if you feel they are targeting you, and not just a market of opportunity, its time to hit back. Go full on open source on the project, retain copyrights etc, but put everything out there to the extent that only those who can not possibly do it themselves could need to purchase their product. Release a kit form ranging from bare board to full on Heathkit quality kit complete with pretty pictures. Once I put together a major field upgrade instruction for a portable X-ray system based on HTML and presentable on any computer you had at hand. HTML let me create a very professional and highly usable upgrade instruction. Once done, it cost nothing additional to reproduce. Showcase your designs and merits to the fullest and derive the benefit of having many more potential clients seeing the skill and value of your craft. May be worth much more than you could make by selling this widget. And yes, release a new design based on the prop and optimize the hell out of it as well. So, what then have you really lost? You learned much that can be recycled building the widget, you made money for a few years by selling the widget, and the concept has proven of value through the newcomers trying to grab your market share as well as whatever else they can gain. I would say you got a heck of a bag of gold out of this now, and a reputation and track record through designing and following through on a successful product.
On to the next project,
Frank
As to the FCC issues, since you did not mention the vehicle this is designed for, I would not be worrying so much about the product in conjunction with devices that transmit and receive signals so much as shielding and RF suppression of whatever your box generates so as not to interfere with the normal functioning of the systems in the car, many of which run on a CAN in newer cars.
models, you may be able to create a marketable niche that ECU performance chips can't compete with.
There wasn't anything like your product on Bank's web site.
Sounds like the marketing presentation is not the challenge here. And the opportunity might lie in making a new product with more features that interest your customers.
What Frank says above is so true, too. Motivation and going to battle is very important. Don't roll over.
Ken Gracey
So with the products life cycle ending, and future niche maybe doubtful, perhaps open-source is your best option.
1. They are using something other than an SX28 as it is no longer being sold. Microchip makes a pin compatible alternative PIC that is somewhat slower at 20Mhz top end.
2. They may be exploiting fabrication in China - which you can too. Contact a PRC embasy and ask them who to contact. They have people that do help. One site that does or did do this is Futurelec.com.
Neither of these are very appealing realities if you want to do business in America and be loyal to Parallax. But they are worth considering if quiting business is your likely next step. But it is certainly worthwhile to sit down with someone from Parallax and see if you can product a next generation item that is more value.
Patents are over-rated. Ken points out that you not only have to own one - you have to defend it. In today's world, a $30,000 patent can easily demand millions of dollars in legal defense.
Judging from our sales volume, there is a possibility that the competitor is an over-enthusiastic idiot that may drop out of the market. Keep in contact with your customers and ask them if this guy is really delivering good product.
That is because many automotive types seem to be more "mechanical" and less "electronic" in nature.
Also an old sales trick is to offer several different models of something, each with slightly different features. Then it becomes not if they will buy your product or not, rather which of your products they will buy!
And the differences might just be color. Say a red version, a blue, and black.