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  1. #1
    Lambo's Avatar
    Lambo is offline Senior Member
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    Ridiculous Ideas That Made People Millions

    Have you ever watched an infomercial or seen an item in a department store and thought "I could have thought of that!" Have you wished you had invested money early in a blockbuster invention? Learn the stories behind some (seemingly) ridiculous ideas that have made inventors and investors very wealthy, and find out what you, as a potential investor, should look for and consider before putting up capital for a potential funding opportunity.


    The Koosh Ball

    You've may have never heard of Scott Stillinger but somewhere in your home or office you probably have one of his inventions – the Koosh ball, which made millions of dollars. Stillinger came up with the idea for the Koosh ball when he tied rubber bands together to create a smaller, easier-to-catch ball for his young children in 1987. He founded OddzOn Products Inc. to distribute the small, simple toy, and within just 12 months it was flying off of store shelves as that year's hottest Christmas gift.

    The company expanded, and in 1994 Stillinger sold OddzOn to toy manufacturer Russ Berrie and Company Inc., which in turn was bought by toy behemoth Hasbro in 1997 for more $100 million

    Santa Mail

    Every year, millions of children around the globe pen letters to Santa and hope for a response. Byron Reese realized the potential in this market. In 2002, he launched "Santa Mail," a service that allows kids to send letters to the North Pole. Parents enclose a small fee of just $9.95, and little Johnny or Jane receives a personalized letter back from the "big man" himself. By 2009, Santa Mail had responded to nearly 300,000 children. At close to $10 a letter, well, you can do the math - needless to say, it was a little idea that has earned Reese a big return.

    Lucky Break Wishbones

    Are you still a little bitter that, at last year's Thanksgiving dinner, you lost out to your cousin Ned in the annual fight over the lone turkey wishbone? Well, thanks to Ken Ahroni, those days are long over. In 1999, he had something of an epiphany at his family's Thanksgiving dinner table: a family with multiple people would like multiple wishbones. He shuttered his previous consulting business and launched Lucky Break Wishbone Corp. in 2004, in order to sell his one-of-a-kind breakable plastic wishbones. Within two years, the company was generating nearly $1 million in sales through distributors in more than 40 states nationwide.

    Antenna Balls

    You've seen them; maybe you even sport one on your car. Those ubiquitous, yellow smiley-faced balls perched atop antennas in parking lots nationwide have made Jason Wall a very wealthy man. Inspired in 1997 by a commercial for the fast food chain Jack in the Box, Wall created some antenna ball designs and began selling them locally through auto stores in California in 1998. Within a year, he had earned more than $1.15 million in sales and quickly won major accounts to sell his product through national chains, including Wal-Mart. In 2009, the multimillionaire is president and CEO of In-Concept Inc.

    source: Ridiculous-Ideas-That-Made-People-Millions: Personal Finance News from Yahoo! Finance

  2. #2
    bananaman is offline Senior Member
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    Some guy was selling "pet rocks" in the 70's. Yep, rocks. And it made him a millionaire. That is the most ridiculous thing. Ever.

    Pet Rock - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  3. #3
    Iamnotsatisfied is offline Senior Member
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    I think the guy who sold a million pixels on his site for a dollar each fits in with the above guys.
    "The unexamined life is not worth living."

    Socrates

  4. #4
    Lambo's Avatar
    Lambo is offline Senior Member
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    yeah the pet rock thing was dumb...but it worked....so i guess thats all that matters.

  5. #5
    businesgoonline is offline Senior Member
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    i believe there is no stupid idea in creating bucks, there are only people who dont dare to take the risk in earning big bucks!

  6. #6
    byzantium is offline Senior Member
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    I remember the koosh ball, I used to have a red white and blue one. I read how real estate companies that are stuck with millions of square feet in useless retail space are putting ads in the windows. I know that my city has zillions of empty shopping centers, since we overbuilt by WAY too much during the boom, only to be stuck with space nobody wants. I was in Silicon Valley recently, and I saw entire office buildings for rent-the whole building. And they're building more-construction continues on a group of office buildings in downtown Sunnyvale, on the site of what was a mall. I wonder if they would be willing to have ads painted on those useless buildings? :P

  7. #7
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    jonathanfigaro is offline Moderator
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    As long as you believe in the material, and you have a vision of the idea working! than you success is ultimately guaranteed with the right determination!
    Don't be a Dropout
    Drop into Successful Living Today
    thedropoutkid.comhttp://www.thedropoutkid.com

  8. #8
    tom-knox is offline Senior Member
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    I'm with businesgoonline, the second an idea makes a single buck, it's clever, but doubters, love to call stupid on things.

  9. #9
    terrycan's Avatar
    terrycan is offline Junior Member
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    know your strengths

    Investing in a single invention is risky

    If you invest in an invention be sure it is an area you are strong in.

    For example a logger will understand a tree cutting tool.

    He will not understand the next fashion trend in women's high heel shoes.

    If you see a need you may see an invention!
    Massive success to you.

    Terry Cantwell

    http://www.protect-new-idea.com

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