I have wanted to get into the machined product space for a little while. I enjoy watching things getting produced and knowing what I have made is getting put to good use by others.
looking at the tooling I have at my disposal and what my abilities are, I decided that I should first start out with a relatively easy product that I can produce without lots of capital. The answer I came up with is universal tooling that the bench top machine guys could benefit from (I like to machine as a hobby so this hits close to home). It's a simple and pretty straightforward product. A fixture plate with its own custom clamps and step blocks that can allow someone to clamp down their parts they intend to do some machining on. Nothing new here, just my own variation on it.
I went out to my shop and I produced a prototype to try out and also take some pictures of. I tried to machine a couple of pieces of raw metal with my clamps holding onto it and it worked just fine. So, I was confident in my prototype and then I started to think about how in the world I would go about connecting with businesses to ask them if they would be interested in including my product in their own product line to sell to their customers.
Now, this is where I am out of my element. I don't really know anybody in the retail business that deals with this sort of thing. So, with zero customer leads, I though I could simply start with shooting some online machine tooling businesses a message through their contact email and let them know that I am interested in providing them with this product of mine.
I believe I messaged about ten or twelve businesses. I did get a reply from the owner of one of the businesses I had messaged. He liked what he saw in the pictures and expressed interest in talking about details of price and so on. He felt that his customers would like this product and he could move 3 to 5 units per month. I thought "OK, well that's a good start". I appreciate his interest and I am happy to call him my first customer .
So, this is where I am currently at. I know I will definitely need more than one customer to make it worth while. I feel like I just got lucky with the email method and perhaps that's an inefficient way to reach out to people. Its basically the email version of cold calling and I imagine acquiring a customer that way is statistically low. Or, perhaps that's just the way it is no matter what medium is used. I don't know.
I have always wondered how companies get distribution set up with larger establishments. I sometimes visit the online stores of MSC supply or McMaster Carr and I see products I am familiar with and some that I have bought for my own use. I wonder how the smaller companies are able to connect and get some channels setup to get product moved. I guess I feel like I am not understanding how this all works exactly. My whole life I have done business as the consumer, so thinking about business in terms of the manufacturer is foreign to me.
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