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The Bootstrapper’s Guide to Launching New Products

One of the most gut-wrenching moments for a company is the rollout of a new product. A significant swing and miss can break a company’s momentum — and maybe its bank Inc.com - The Daily Resource for Entrepreneursaccount. Unfortunately, after months or even years of development, many companies discover that customers aren’t willing to buy their new wares. That’s why some entrepreneurs are trying another approach to product launches: marketing a product online before spending much on research and development or inventory.

Consider the method used by TPGTEX Label Solutions, a Houston-based software company that specializes in bar codes and labels for manufacturers and chemical companies. Like many companies, TPGTEX rolls out new products several times a year. But instead of spending the time and money to develop products on spec, TPGTEX creates mocked-up webpages that list the features of a potential new product — such as a system for making radio-frequency identification, or RFID, labels — along with its price. Then, the company spends no more than a few hundred dollars marketing the product through search engines and to the contacts in its sales database and LinkedIn. It isn’t until a customer actually clicks or calls to place an order that TPGTEX’s developers will build the software. “We do not develop a product until we get a paying customer,” says Orit Pennington, who co-founded the six-employee company with her husband in 2002. Development time is typically no more than two to three weeks, and it generally takes just a few orders to cover development costs. Read full story:

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