Dangerous Mistakes That Could Kill Your Hardware Startups

If you’ve not brought a hardware product to market before, there is, unfortunately, a lot that you don’t know. We frequently see founders trip up in a few key ways: 

1. Spending time and money on patents pre-seed funding

There are a lot of hardware founders who worried about their idea and focused on intellectual property in the early days. If you haven’t raised money from institutional investors (VC) yet this is usually a waste of time and money. By the time patents are issued the market opportunity and business often doesn’t exist anymore. Or, the product has changed enough that your initial claims don’t apply. Usually, the only time utility patents become useful is during an acquisition (they’re an intangible you can negotiate with for more $$) or if you’re super successful and large enough to finance litigation. Then you can actually afford the millions of dollars and years spent suing someone. 

2. Treating contract manufacturers like service providers

Factory owners are highly cognisant of opportunity cost. The best contract manufacturers are not, in fact, dying to take your order. Stable orders from a large company are always more attractive than working with startups. 

Pitch contract manufacturers with just as much care as you would any VC and investors. Since you likely can’t lure them with high volumes, many factories are looking to broaden their product portfolio and capabilities.  

3. Not having a handle on cash flow

Inventory creates complex cash flow issues for hardware startups. It’s not unusual to pay 50% upfront and 50% on delivery with a contract manufacturer. It’s also not unusual for a retailer to issue a purchase order with 90-day payment terms. This means many hardware startups are fronting cash for 3–6 months of inventory, all paid for by equity. Equity investors HATE paying for inventory. They’d far rather have their money spent on something that actually increases the value of the business, like hiring great people. 

4. Spending crowdfunding dollars on product development

Kickstarter and Indiegogo (or similar) serve a valuable place in the hardware funding ecosystem but pre-sales are closer to debt than equity. Every dollar you “raise” must be repaid with the product. Because pre-sales are often the first money a young company brings in, it often gets confused with equity financing. You even hear it in the way founders talk: “we raised $1M on Kickstarter.” In reality, you haven’t raised any money at all, you’ve pre-sold product. 

Because it’s highly unlikely you’ll make money off your first few thousand units, only crowdfund once you’ve completed product development enough to know your BOM, COGS, fixed costs, and distribution margin. If you don’t, you risk a hoard of angry backers at your door with pitchforks. 

5. Not allocating enough money for marketing in your first raise

Just like product development, figuring out a winning customer acquisition strategy is iterative. Founders are often so focused on getting first units out the door that almost all of their initial money has gone towards engineering. Marketing or distribution focused on customer acquisition and scale are often overlooked.  

Still have questions? Contact CRINNAC

We are an engineering and consulting firm that provides new product development, engineering and manufacturing services. 

Our decades of expertise in design, engineering & manufacturing processes means that you can have peace of mind and happy customers for your new product, process & efficiency improvement, new technologies implementation and R&D projects.  

SIMILAR ARTICLES