Outskirts Press Publishing Experience Review From: Charles B. McGough, author of I’ve Got This Great Idea! Now What?


“Great work. Very satisfactory experience.”

Dr. Charles B. McGough has a BS from Gonzaga University and MS and PhD degrees from the University of Pittsburgh, all in Chemical Engineering, twenty-five years in senior management positions in large U.S. technical corporations, fifteen years as president of two industrial laser companies, six issued patents, one trademark, seven provisional patent applications, and many publications. One of his products, which is currently sold nationwide in Lowe’s, Sam’s Club, and other outlets, is rapidly approaching one million units sold, and several of his other new products will soon be distributed nationally. Dr. McGough and his wife Elizabeth have four grown sons and live in Savannah, Georgia.

 

Product description…

Do You Have An Exciting Idea for a New Product? This Book’s For You!

Hardly a week goes by when the author is not approached by a friend or acquaintance who says, “I’ve got this idea for a great new product but don’t know what to do with it. Can you help me?” His doctor friend with an idea for a new medical device; the guy painting his house who has a design for a better paint can lid; his neighbor who has a concept for a trophy golf ball display; a golf buddy who has a new ball marking device to help golfers line up putts. They ask him because they know he has invented, patented, trademarked, and licensed successful new products himself. But when he looked into it he found that, although there are a number of books on the market aimed at amateur inventors, none of them provide clear, step-by-step guidelines to help them take their idea from conception to a commercial product. These books usually tell the first-time inventor what to do, but not how to do it. Hence this little book. In ten concise chapters, called MileMarkers, it tells the new inventors not only what to do, but shows them how to do it. It guides them through the ten critical steps necessary to convert their great new ideas into commercially-successful new products. This, while minimizing the use of expensive patent attorneys. This book also addresses the small-inventor issues raised by the new “America Invents Act” signed into law on Sept 16, 2011, which mandates the first significant changes to U.S. patent law in 60 years.Outskirts Press Review

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