We are pleased to announce our Licensed Multi Tier Cake Pan was showcased on QVC.
Click on the link to view this exciting news!!
We are pleased to announce our Licensed Multi Tier Cake Pan was showcased on QVC.
Click on the link to view this exciting news!!
As a new inventor I made many mistakes in trying to patent and license my idea. One of the biggest mistakes was working with so called invention companies which promised to help sell my idea to manufactures. After many years and thousands of dollars spent with these companies I realized that they were only interested in how much money they could receive from me and were not really trying hard to market and license my invention. When I contacted Pacific World Marketing they explained to me how their approach was totally different from the others. They actually contact the manufactures/companies and spoke with the proper personnel so that your idea gets the attention it deserves instead of blindly mailing a brochure to a company/manufacture like the other invention companies do, which in all likely hood ends up in the trash. Previously I had spent 5 years and thousands of dollars trying to market my invention without success with these invention companies. Because of their approach, Pacific World Marketing found a manufacture willing to license my invention within a year of signing the contract. If you’re serious about finding a manufacture and licensing your idea don’t get scammed by other invention companies, Ken and his staff at Pacific World Marketing will work with you and present your idea to manufactures in the best possible light and get your idea noticed. I cannot be more pleased in what they have done for me and I highly recommend Pacific World Marketing.
Jerry H
Inventor
Wrap Around Tie Down
Pacific World Marketing is pleased to announce we secured two (2) agreements for inventive products in the last 45 days!!
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| A baker named William Russel Frisbie, of Warren, Connecticut, and later of Bridgeport, came up with a clever marketing idea back in the 1870s. He put the family name in relief on the bottom of the light tin pans in which his company’s homemade pies were sold. The pans were reusable, but every time a housewife started to bake a pie in one, she would see the name Frisbie and, it was hoped, think, “How much easier to buy one”. Eventually Mr. Frisbie’s pies were sold throughout much of Connecticut, including New Haven. | ![]() |
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| There, sometime in the 1940s, Yale students began sailing the pie tins through the air and catching them. A decade later, out in California, a flying-saucer enthusiast named Walter Frederick Morrison designed a saucer-like disk for playing catch. It was produced by a company named Wham-O. On a promotional tour of college campuses, the president of Wham-O encountered the pie-plate-tossing craze at Yale. And so the flying saucer from California was renamed after the pie plate from Connecticut. Of course the name was changed from Frisbie to Frisbee to avoid any legal problems. | |||
Firefighters sickened by an inventor’s experiment and a woman claiming she was scorned by her stepmother are among the lawsuits recently filed in Multnomah County Circuit Court:
Invention explodes: The city of Portland is suing an inventor whose alternative-fuel experiment caught fire in a garage of his apartment complex, exposing 10 firefighters to mercury vapors.
To read the full story click on the link below:
http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2009/07/portland_sues_after_invention.html
The Dream Fish Hook Lure was invented by M. Hughes
The Flippin-Chicken Bar-B-Q Pit, invented by R. Rabell, will be made by Kingfisher Kookers, Inc. of Kingfisher, OK. Kingfisher Kookers, Inc is the oldest continuously operating grill manufacturer in the United States, in business since 1938. Kingfisher Kookers is responsible for many national and world BBQ competition titles. Quality workmanship and materials, versatility, and convenience are what separate us from the competition. The company plans to add Rabell’s Flippin-Chicken Bar-B-Q-Pit to its product line by year’s end.
This agreement also helps Pacific World Marketing elevate it’s overall invention licensing success.
“Consistent invention success requires a real commitment to getting the design and development right, and then working diligently on marketing to the industry leaders who make licensing and buying decisions, time and again” said Kenneth Maghuyop, Pacific World Marketing’s CEO.
“We’re pleased to see our highly concerted efforts pay off. We’ll be even more pleased to see these new products launch into stores,” Maghuyop added.
To view the exciting details click on the link below:
http://www.free-press-release.com/news/200907/1247860566.html
About Pacific World Marketing.
Pacific World Marketing based out of Brentwood, CA is a leading provider of product development and new product innovative marketing. The company’s broad suite of services is designed specifically for new and innovative products.
Pacific World Marketing specializes in marketing and licensing patents. The company offers its services for hardware, sporting goods, technology, toys, housewares, gifts, health and beauty, medical, outdoor, office, lawn and garden, pet, office supply and automotive product categories.
Our innovative products can be found in Target, Amazon.com, ChefTools, IHome.com, Golda’s Inc, Toys R US and Matco Tools Auto Parts. For more information please visit www.pacificworldmarketing.com or Pacific World Marketing Blog at www.pacificworldmarketingllc.com
For the month of July we are offering you the opportunity to advertise your idea for FREE.
Write up a short description explaining your invention (features and benefits will help) and we will post your idea right here. Remember pictures are worth a thousand words! Don’t forget to leave your contact number.
Post your idea here or drop us a line at info@pacificworldmarketing.com
Patents …
provide exclusive rights to make, use, import, sell and offer for sale the invention for up to 20 years.
Utility patents …
protect useful processes, machines, articles of manufacture, and compositions of matter. Examples: fiber optics, computer hardware, medications.
Design patents …
guard the unauthorized use of new, original, and ornamental designs for articles of manufacture. The look of an athletic shoe, a bicycle helmet, and the Star Wars characters are all protected by design patents.
Plant patents …
are the way we protect invented or discovered, asexually reproduced plant varieties. Hybrid tea roses, Silver Queen corn, Better Boy tomatoes are all types of plant patents.
Trademarks …
protect words, names, symbols, sounds, or colors that distinguish goods and services. Trademarks, unlike patents, can be renewed forever as long as they are being used in business. The roar of the MGM lion, the pink of the insulation made by Owens-Corning (who uses the Pink Panther in advertising by permission from its owner!), and the shape of a Coca-Cola bottle are familiar trademarks.
Copyrights …
protect works of authorship, such as writings, music, and works of art that have been tangibly expressed. The Library of Congress registers copyrights which last for the life of the author plus 70 years. Gone With The Wind (the book and film), Back Street Boys’ recordings, and video games are all works that are copyrighted.
Trade Secrets …
are information that companies keep secret to give them an advantage over their competitors. The formula for Coca-Cola is the most famous trade secret.