One expert and three business owners discuss business ideas and how success can sometimes come from seemingly foolish thoughts.
Although a few businesses ideas are unique, many involve what Kevin Duncan describes as “conceptual blending”, which is taking an idea and applying it in a new context. “Add the delivery mechanism of a biro to stick deodorant and you invent roll-on deodorant,” he explains.
Duncan is a business adviser, marketing expert and author of more than 20 books for small businesses, including The Ideas Book: 50 Ways to Generate Ideas Visually. “Anyone can have a business idea,” he continues. “But if enough people aren’t willing to buy it to cover your costs and generate enough profit – you have no business.”
Asking potential customers as early as possible what they think of your business idea – and how much they would pay for it – is essential. “Before starting up, the founders of Innocent set up a stall at a jazz festival with ‘good’ and ‘bad’ bins. All people had to do was lob their empty smoothie container into one bin or the other. Easy, fast, reliable market research.”
“Many advisers say you should ‘always be in beta’, but I disagree. Get it right at the beginning and get on with it.”
Promising ideas can be refined, says Duncan, who believes you should test fast, then decide. “Many advisers say you should ‘always be in beta’, but I disagree. Get it right at the beginning and then get on with it.”
Duncan also believes in speaking to experts if you lack technical knowledge, because their input can make a big difference. “When testing business ideas you must be brutally honest,” Duncan stresses. “If it’s rubbish, start again. And again. If your ideas are never good enough, admit it and give up. It could save you a lot of time, money and grief.”
Recipe for success
“I came up with the idea while sitting at home thinking there had to be a better way to cook great meals without all the hard work,” recalls Timo Boldt. “Having to find recipes, go shopping, and weigh ingredients was painful, while inevitably you end up wasting food. I thought if someone could fix this for less than the supermarkets charge, it would be insanely amazing.”
Boldt started London-based Gousto in 2012 with friend James Carter. Customers can visit the website, pick recipes and then order pre-measured ingredients to ensure no waste, which soon arrive at their door. “We made many small changes before launching, but our first real customer feedback triggered much bigger changes,’ Schmidt confesses.
“Customer feedback is vital. We still obsess about listening to our customers – they drive our product roadmap.”
Soon they were testing their recipes from market stalls, where reaction was overwhelmingly positive, but they were still able to learn. Boldt says it’s essential to test a business idea thoroughly before committing time and money. “Customer feedback is vital. We still obsess about listening to our customers – they drive our entire product roadmap,” he says.
In less than four years Gousto has scaled to now support more than 200 jobs, selling millions of meals per year. It has attracted £20m of investment, while ex-LOVEFILM CEO, Simon Calver, now sits on the company’s board. Always seeking new ideas, Gousto has launched apps to make ordering even more convenient, while introducing more choice to the menu (which now features dishes created by Theo Randall and Mary Berry, as well as wine and desserts). “You must take time to develop ideas – but sometimes it does take a leap of faith,” Boldt smiles.
“While enjoying food and drink with friends, Kahana lifted up his feet. He wondered why most socks looked so boring.”
Socks appeal
Gil Kahana and Humberto De Sousa became friends while studying communication design at Central Saint Martins. One day they were enjoying food and drink with friends and as Kahana relaxed he lifted up his feet. He wondered why most socks looked so boring. Then he got around to thinking how much better socks could be if animated with characters (“almost like wearing sock puppets on your feet”).
“I suggested the idea to Humberto and asked if he would like to collaborate. Then we started to meet up once a week to progress the idea, because we both had full-time jobs,” he says. “We drew quirky faces onto white socks, to see what worked best. At first we didn’t really have any business ambitions, but it grew. We then asked people on the street in London for their views on personal expression through clothing. It confirmed our thinking: the characters on our socks should only become visible when shoes were taken off.”
Chatty Feet launched in 2012 and feedback was mostly positive, says Kahana. “One blog made a negative comment, but it didn’t stop us,” he adds. Now with such characters as Kate Middle-Toe, Prof Brian Sox, Andy Sock-Hole, they sell socks in 27 designs in nine countries. “Last year we doubled our unit sales and we’re currently looking to open up new overseas markets,” Kahana reveals.
When seeking feedback, Kahana recommends having a prototype. “Then people can see exactly what you’re talking about. Also carry out research to make sure someone hasn’t already got there. Discussing your ideas with others can be beneficial, but make sure you’re in a stimulating environment. You should feel able to express your thoughts. Some people see the world in strict paradigms; they struggle with new ideas. Don’t listen to them,” he advises.
“The Dragons abused me in their typical style – even saying that my product was dangerous. Afterwards I was angry, but determined to show them.”
Buoyant sales
Kevin Moseley was a swimming instructor in Lancashire in the late-1980s. For a fun way to end lessons he would pretend to be a shark and swim around the pool wearing a fin made from two polystyrene kickboards. One day a child asked if he could try the fin, because it looked fun. Moseley experienced his own eureka moment, realising the commercial potential.
“Over some years I created, tested and improved prototypes,” he remembers. “I’d taken out a trade mark and had patents pending when I was invited to appear on Dragons’ Den in 2006. The Dragons abused me in their typical style – even saying that my product was dangerous. Afterwards I was angry, but determined to show them.”
Kevin remortgaged his home, borrowed from the bank, cashed in his life savings and sold his swimming school business to raise start-up capital. “It was a huge gamble, risking everything on an idea seeking to change the way swimming is taught around the world. I could never have been 100 per cent sure it would succeed,’ he confesses.
Moseley modified his product, had it tested rigorously against international safety standards. “I spent 18 months on R&D. You can’t launch a swimming aid without thorough testing – parents must be able to trust your products.” Then he found a manufacturer and launched Northampton-based SwimFin in 2008, running the business from his garage.
“In our first year we sold about 70,000 units in 46 countries overseas – a promising start. Now we export to more than 100 countries, have 44 exclusive international distributors and in the next year we hope to sell our one millionth SwimFin. We have a range of products, but the pioneering SwimFin is still the bestseller. I’m very proud of my idea and the business.”
• Written for The Guardian Small Business Network by Dead Good Content founder, Mark Williams.