Archive for the ‘Edison Nation In The News’ Category

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Last chance to submit to PetSmart and EN featured on Animal Planet

Monday, November 30th, 2009

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The PetSmart Live Product Search closes tonight at midnight. Learn more or submit your idea: http://www.edisonnation.com/live_product_searches/PS213.

While we are on the topic of pets, Edison Nation was featured on the Animal Planet show “Your Pet Wants This” which aired on Saturday, November, 28.

“From an airline catering exclusively to pets, to GPS tracking units for your dog and robotic litter boxes for your cat, “Your Pet Wants This” showcases the latest and greatest in products for your pet.”

Edison Nation was interviewed and we featured three products; the Sports leash for Dogs Rock, the Rock and Roll Cat Feeder and Doggy Duks. As soon as we get our paws on a copy of the footage I will post it here on the blog.

Edison Nation is Huge in Japan

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Japan

Today Edison Nation is being introduced to Japanese readers in the Nikkei Sangyo Shimbun newspaper as a cutting edge service with top products that reflect the current American lifestyle. Nikkei Sangyo Shimbun is a business and industry daily newspaper with a circulation of 300,000 readers. The paper is published by Nikkei, one of the largest media corporations in Japan that specializes in financial, business and industry news in Japan. Nikkei Sangyo Shimbun is considered the Wall Street Journal of Japan.

If we get our hands on an English version I will be sure to post it right here on the blog for your reading pleasures!

Edison Nation on National Public Radio 11/4/09

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

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NPR’s Marketplace Morning Report featured a piece on Edison Nation this morning.

Tune In: Networking Web site gathers inventors

TEXT OF STORY: http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2009/11/04/am-edison-nation

BILL RADKE: You know, I’ll bet at some point in your life, you have said to yourself, “I have this great idea for a new product,” and then you forgot about it because, how would you ever get it to market? Well reporter Simone Orendain tells us about an invention Web site based in Charlotte, N.C.


SIMONE ORENDAIN: Every good idea needs a home. Like a scratching post covered with sand paper so your cat can file its own nails.

AD: Here kitty, kitty! Ever try to trim your cat’s claws? It’s impossible! Now your cat can trim her own claws, with Emery Cat!

“Emery Cat” is on store shelves thanks to a PBS reality show called “Everyday Edisons.” The program tracks how ordinary folks turn ideas into useful products. The show got so many great ideas from would-be inventors, they started a Web site called “Edison Nation” just to collect those pitches.

And the business community took notice. Now companies like Home Depot, Bed Bath & Beyond and PetSmart come to “Edison Nation” to find the next big thing.

MATT SPANGARD: We have a team of experts who interview the retailers.

Matt Spangard heads Edison Nation.

SPANGARD: They then tell us what their needs are. We put together a live product search.

So for example, Home Depot is looking for new tools that make painting faster and easier. Exactly what that means is left up to the inventor’s imagination. Spangard says retailers like the system because they’d prefer to deal directly with Edison Nation’s experts, rather than with individual inventors.

Charlotte inventor and veterinarian Mike Thomann knows what it’s like to go it alone. He spent $50,000 and five years of his life trying to sell companies on his invention, a portable pooper scooper.

MIKE THOMANN: I’m trying to cram this down their throats, whereas Edison Nation has idea hunts where companies are coming saying these are the products we want, we have an opening for it, so just fulfill the opening.

Now Thomann’s invention — he calls it the “Port-a-Scoop” — is a finalist in a PetSmart search.

THOMANN: It’s a streamlined process and you don’t have to fight with these retailers and these big companies much to get your product on a shelf. So it’s a very efficient process.

If Thomann’s idea is accepted, Edison Nation will give him a $2,500 advance. And they’ll take care of licensing the product.

So, what’s in it for Edison Nation? It splits royalties 50-50 with the inventors.

In Charlotte, I’m Simone Orendain for Marketplace.

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