Just had an idea to help blind people... where/how?

Permabanned
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5 Apr 2006
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I still laugh from when I was a boy and me and my group of friends we to an empty one weekend, The guy who's house we were going to was called Skid, I asked people why his name was skid and they gave me a " are you stupid " look
A few hours passed and a few drinks in stood there it clicked! " AHHHH his name is Mark! "
 
Soldato
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12 Jul 2007
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Stoke/Norfolk
Guide-Midgets for the Blind.

Way better than a dog and yet only takes up the same space in the house - everyone's a winner! You get something that can talk, hold things and is house-trained etc to help out and the midget gets free food and a roof over their head - absolute genius!
 
Soldato
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2 Nov 2013
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You could try contacting the RNIB. My sister is partially sighted - they used to have a magazine of stuff useful to a visual impaired person. It was a bit like a specialised Kleeneze catalogue. Maybe if your idea is good, they would work with you to produce it and sell it.
 
Associate
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20 Mar 2012
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Tell me the idea I will patent it for £500

But seriously would be interested to see how all that works. Only ever done trademark before and tbh they are not worth the time and effort a lot of the time.

Sorry if this is a bit OT, but could you elaborate a bit about TMs please? I had an idea for a brand the other day and was thinking I would need to go through the TM process for it if I wanted to go ahead with it.
 
Soldato
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Yeah looks like it costs about £4K to patent a design... too much for me
I've been through that process and I wouldn't bother if I was you. You're only covered for the area that the patent is for, so really it's little to stop people if they really wanted to do something.

Regardless of what the idea is, I'd run it through a business model canvas as a first step. You want to understand what the value proposition is you're proposing and if there is product market fit for your customer segment. If you get past that and you have great success you can look to build out a prototype. This would be far more valuable as a total process rather than a patent for sure.
 
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