Entrepreneur

This Founder Created a Genius Way to Do Market Testing on the Cheap

Time to get creative.
Source: Michele Monet Photography

How do you market test a new product when you can't pay for testing? Joelle Mertzel found a sneaky solution -- and it cost only $39. Here's how she developed her new butter dish, Butterie

The research

Mertzel wanted to make a flip-top dish is the key,” says Mertzel, who used to own a PR agency. “You don’t want to spend all your money and time on a product no one will buy.” She began by surveying people from her daily life. Her next step: formal market research on her prototype dish. A consultant quoted $10,000 to see if 40 to 60 percent of people would buy the product. (If so, it’s viable.) Mertzel didn’t have that money, but she had an idea: If she went to places where people were sitting around doing nothing, she thought, they’d answer that question. 

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Entrepreneur

Entrepreneur3 min read
What’s the Real Damage?
Miri Offir knows how to talk to people in crisis. After serving in the Israeli military, she came to the U.S. in 2003 and took a secretary job at the post-disaster recovery franchise 911 Restoration. She worked her way up—eventually becoming the comp
Entrepreneur2 min read
Japan
These past few years have been witness to an extraordinary economic renaissance in the world’s third-largest economy. From cost-cutting and sluggish to dynamic, growth-orientated, and rocket-fuelled by active investment, healthy inflation, and a high
Entrepreneur5 min readCorporate Finance
How to Build the Next Huge Thing
Want to start, fund, and sell a major company? Spencer Rascoff has some advice on that—because he’s seen it from all sides. As a founder, he first cofounded the travel-booking site Hotwire, which he sold to Expedia. He then cofounded Zillow, which he

Related Books & Audiobooks