How are inventors supposed to avoid Chinese copycats?

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Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,977
7,417
136
How are inventors supposed to avoid Chinese copycats?

I do IT work for a lot of different companies that do manufacturing. Basically, you typically have a 6-month window of opportunity to grab sales before your product is cloned & sold for cheaper; that is just the nature of the business. Price is the bottom line for the majority of consumers, so across the board, they will buy an inferior product if it means savings money. A "good enough" product is a very powerful thing to have in the marketplace simply because people will buy it & you will make money.

The plot thickens in modern times with patent wars, faster manufacturing, Internet word-of-mouth, and so on. For example, Yeti sells heavy-duty coolers that keep your food cold for like a week. Their Tundra 65 cooler is a whopping $400. RTIC came along and knocked it off (basically used the same mold) for 50% off. $200 is still a lot of money, but for essentially the same product, it's a pretty good bargain. I bought one on their last sale (fire sale for legal reasons, whoohoo!) for even cheaper:

https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/rtic-cooler-sale.2497930/

So they eventually came under legal fire & were forced to (slightly) redesign their products, which they improved by adding more features like dual drain valves, larger capacities, etc. And the funny thing is, Yeti is actually a ripoff of Engel, but they were in a different market & Yeti changed the design just enough to not step on any toes legally. And aside from the legal issues, sometimes manufacturers just move too fast...apparently the soft-pack Yeti coolers were knocked off by RTIC before they even hit the market, haha. And the competition can leverage all of your market & brand awareness by Internet word-of-mouth. Direct from RTIC's FAQ:

How Can you sell your coolers at a fraction of the price of the competition?

We are a direct to consumer retailer. By cutting out the big box retailers and using word of mouth & social media to promote our coolers versus paying for high priced ambassadors and commercials, we are able to offer high quality coolers that have all of the features our customers want - at a fraction of the price.

So Yeti knocked off Engel & made roto-molded coolers mainstream, then RTIC (among others) capitalized on that success by cloning them (with good quality, no less) & relying on blogs, deals websites, Youtube, etc. to get the word out. Personally, I had seen Yeti's before at Cabella's, but the prices drove me away. But the RTIC on sale was a pretty good deal for essentially the same exact product. The consumer argument is very strong...same thing for half off, what's not to like?

One of the saddest stories in recent memory was the Fidget Cube Kickstarter. They originally raised over $6 million dollars for a very neat & very original product:

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/antsylabs/fidget-cube-a-vinyl-desk-toy

However, they got beat to the market before they even shipped! And not just by a little bit, but by a LOT! As of a few months ago, there were over 60 copycats available:

https://www.reddit.com/r/fidgettoys/comments/5rfcnn/63_fidget_cube_clones_that_you_can_order_until/

One of my friends bought a knockoff for like $5 online from one of the direct-from-China websites. The buttons are all low-quality & don't work very well, but it does the job. Here's a really good article about how a 24-year-old make $345,000 in 2 months by beating the Kickstarter product to the market:

http://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/30/a-24-year-old-made-345000-by-beating-kickstarters-to-market.html

A similar thing happened to the Kickstarter that made a self-stick built into a smartphone case. Great article here:

https://qz.com/771727/chinas-factor...ime-for-the-rest-of-the-world-to-get-over-it/

Basically...get your product to the market as fast as possible, and if possible, create the marketing buzz when you're ready to ship so that you have a little time before the knockoffs come out. China has immense mobility when it comes to manufacturing. One of the craziest stories I've ever read is of the last-minute switch from plastic to glass screens on the original iPhone:

http://www.businessinsider.com/steve-jobs-new-iphone-screen-2012-1

Article highlights:

Steve had been using a prototype iPhone for a few weeks, carrying it around in his pocket. When his lieutenants were assembled, he pulled the prototype out of his pocket and pointed angrily to dozens of scratches on its plastic screen.

People would carry their phones in their pockets, Steve said. They would also carry other things in their pockets--like keys. And those things would scratch the screen.

And then, with Apple just about to ramp up iPhone production, Steve demanded that the iPhone's screen be replaced with unscratchable glass.

“I want a glass screen," Steve is quoted as saying. "And I want it perfect in six weeks.”

But how to meet that requirement?

Before they even won Apple's business, the Chinese company started building a new factory building in which to cut the glass. (The Chinese government was providing subsidies, and the company took advantage of them--"just in case.") The company provided Apple with a team of cheap engineers, as well as spare glass for Apple to experiment with, the latter for free. The company's engineers were housed in dormitories, so they were available to Apple 24 hours a day.

Apple hired the company to cut the hardened glass for the screens, and after a month of experimentation, the engineers figured out how to do it. They quickly sent the first shipment of screens to Foxconn's assembly plant in Shenzhen, where they arrived in the middle of the night. Foxconn's managers woke up thousands of workers and immediately began assembling iPhones.

Three months later, Apple had sold 1 million iPhones. Four years later, Apple has sold ~200 million of them.

As the Apple executives who spoke to Duhigg and Bradsher for their article make clear, there is no way American manufacturing companies could have met this timetable.

The end-to-end process of building the iPhones, Duhigg and Bradsher report, required 8,700 mid-level engineers. In the United States, Apple estimated, it would have taken 9 months to hire this many engineers. In China, it took 15 days.

Steve Jobs set the requirement, a building in China was thrown up, it took the engineers a month to figure it out, and then they literally woke up thousands of workers to begin the manufacturing. And 3 months later, they sold a million of them. Amazing. Manufacturing these days is a scary world, unless you know how to take advantage of it!
 

Jimzz

Diamond Member
Oct 23, 2012
4,399
190
106
Go after the stores that illegally sell them and hope you can get a big payoff from it otherwise you will waste a lot of money. ;)

Best thing is to get your brand name recognized more so people go for that instead of knockoffs and the stores see that and sell it instead.

Problem is they just call their item your name and sell it. Many fake Forearm Forklift Lifting Straps on amazon and eBay for example. I and many others told amazon about the fakes, even with reviews showing they broke and did not work as well, and they still did not remove them.

They had to get rid of over half their staff as the fakes were selling better than theirs and they are to small to fight it well.
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/10/24/how-...-this-mans-business-on-brink-of-collapse.html
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,975
13,936
126
www.anyf.ca
Yeah a lot of fake stuff is sold as the real thing. THAT needs to be highly illegal. It's one thing to rip off a design and call it something else, but when they actually try to trick people who are trying to buy the real thing that's where it really needs to be stopped.

I'm not a fan of the patent system either, it's needed, but the way it works now, it's only to help the big megacorps. It should not be illegal to make a device that is similar to another or has similar functionality, it should just be illegal to actually rip it off completely. If two people decide to make a device, and they both worked on it themselves, it should not be illegal for the 2nd one to release their device just because some of the features might be similar.
 

MrSquished

Lifer
Jan 14, 2013
26,067
24,398
136
I was in China like in 2007. We went to a marketplace that sold tons of knock-offs. One of the guys there said that the market would be shutting down to appease complaints from the US. He then slyly whispered, 'It's just going to move a couple miles from here"
 

BurnItDwn

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
26,355
1,867
126
Our ports are the real border control problem.
We import so much shit, and it doesn't get inspected. Too many illegal knockoffs make it through. There should be tariffs on imports to pay the dock workers and inspectors.

Every container from every ship should be inspected for illegal goods before it's loaded onto a truck or a train.
 

manly

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
13,462
4,170
136
Our ports are the real border control problem.
We import so much shit, and it doesn't get inspected. Too many illegal knockoffs make it through. There should be tariffs on imports to pay the dock workers and inspectors.

Every container from every ship should be inspected for illegal goods before it's loaded onto a truck or a train.
LOL sure if you want international trade to grind to a fucking halt.
 

FeuerFrei

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2005
9,144
929
126
I see Amazon cleared out a bunch of Chinese knockoffs of Design by Humans shirts.
D.b.H. is a US-based company, with original artwork on the shirts.
The listing page for various shirts used to be littered with 12 to 20 copycat sellers, undercutting on price (good) - but ruining customers' satisfaction (uhoh), thanks to low quality wares.
Maybe Amazon does care.
 

Jimzz

Diamond Member
Oct 23, 2012
4,399
190
106
I see Amazon cleared out a bunch of Chinese knockoffs of Design by Humans shirts.
D.b.H. is a US-based company, with original artwork on the shirts.
The listing page for various shirts used to be littered with 12 to 20 copycat sellers, undercutting on price (good) - but ruining customers' satisfaction (uhoh), thanks to low quality wares.
Maybe Amazon does care.


No they care long enough for the complinats and heat to ware off. The example I gave above, Forearm Forklift Lifting Straps, they shut down just about all the fakes once the stories started to get out. Yet now that's its not in the news look at amazon now and there are tons of fakes again. Even on the "real" Foreman Forklift page you see all the other sellers are back selling the same junk as before.
Now Forearm Forklift company says they are pulling out from amazon since they lose more than they make there. So now if you see one for sale after they leave they know its a fake right away.
 

BurnItDwn

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
26,355
1,867
126
LOL sure if you want international trade to grind to a fucking halt.
It may slow things down, but I am not aware of a better way to validate that shipping manifests are accurate and that everything is properly being accounted for.
 

Skel

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2001
6,225
686
136
I do IT work for a lot of different companies that do manufacturing. Basically, you typically have a 6-month window of opportunity to grab sales before your product is cloned & sold for cheaper; that is just the nature of the business. Price is the bottom line for the majority of consumers, so across the board, they will buy an inferior product if it means savings money. A "good enough" product is a very powerful thing to have in the marketplace simply because people will buy it & you will make money.

The plot thickens in modern times with patent wars, faster manufacturing, Internet word-of-mouth, and so on. For example, Yeti sells heavy-duty coolers that keep your food cold for like a week. Their Tundra 65 cooler is a whopping $400. RTIC came along and knocked it off (basically used the same mold) for 50% off. $200 is still a lot of money, but for essentially the same product, it's a pretty good bargain. I bought one on their last sale (fire sale for legal reasons, whoohoo!) for even cheaper:

https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/rtic-cooler-sale.2497930/

So they eventually came under legal fire & were forced to (slightly) redesign their products, which they improved by adding more features like dual drain valves, larger capacities, etc. And the funny thing is, Yeti is actually a ripoff of Engel, but they were in a different market & Yeti changed the design just enough to not step on any toes legally. And aside from the legal issues, sometimes manufacturers just move too fast...apparently the soft-pack Yeti coolers were knocked off by RTIC before they even hit the market, haha. And the competition can leverage all of your market & brand awareness by Internet word-of-mouth. Direct from RTIC's FAQ:



So Yeti knocked off Engel & made roto-molded coolers mainstream, then RTIC (among others) capitalized on that success by cloning them (with good quality, no less) & relying on blogs, deals websites, Youtube, etc. to get the word out. Personally, I had seen Yeti's before at Cabella's, but the prices drove me away. But the RTIC on sale was a pretty good deal for essentially the same exact product. The consumer argument is very strong...same thing for half off, what's not to like?

One of the saddest stories in recent memory was the Fidget Cube Kickstarter. They originally raised over $6 million dollars for a very neat & very original product:

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/antsylabs/fidget-cube-a-vinyl-desk-toy

However, they got beat to the market before they even shipped! And not just by a little bit, but by a LOT! As of a few months ago, there were over 60 copycats available:

https://www.reddit.com/r/fidgettoys/comments/5rfcnn/63_fidget_cube_clones_that_you_can_order_until/

One of my friends bought a knockoff for like $5 online from one of the direct-from-China websites. The buttons are all low-quality & don't work very well, but it does the job. Here's a really good article about how a 24-year-old make $345,000 in 2 months by beating the Kickstarter product to the market:

http://www.cnbc.com/2017/01/30/a-24-year-old-made-345000-by-beating-kickstarters-to-market.html

A similar thing happened to the Kickstarter that made a self-stick built into a smartphone case. Great article here:

https://qz.com/771727/chinas-factor...ime-for-the-rest-of-the-world-to-get-over-it/

Basically...get your product to the market as fast as possible, and if possible, create the marketing buzz when you're ready to ship so that you have a little time before the knockoffs come out. China has immense mobility when it comes to manufacturing. One of the craziest stories I've ever read is of the last-minute switch from plastic to glass screens on the original iPhone:

http://www.businessinsider.com/steve-jobs-new-iphone-screen-2012-1

Article highlights:



But how to meet that requirement?



Steve Jobs set the requirement, a building in China was thrown up, it took the engineers a month to figure it out, and then they literally woke up thousands of workers to begin the manufacturing. And 3 months later, they sold a million of them. Amazing. Manufacturing these days is a scary world, unless you know how to take advantage of it!

Thanks for the CNBC link. I was looking for it the other day. I've heard that there's now a huge group of people that surf Kickstarter to see what's really successful and then attempting to clone it and beat it to the market. Then drop everything when the lawsuit comes in. I've heard in some cases like the fidget cube they made a ton of money before the cease and desist letter came in, so much that they were able pivot to stealing a few other ideas. Totally shady but legal.
 

Mai72

Lifer
Sep 12, 2012
11,562
1,742
126
Much of what you're talking about goes back to branding.

Why is Nike sti so successful? because they always have the hottest athletes wearing their shoes. Jordan, James, etc.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,977
7,417
136
Thanks for the CNBC link. I was looking for it the other day. I've heard that there's now a huge group of people that surf Kickstarter to see what's really successful and then attempting to clone it and beat it to the market. Then drop everything when the lawsuit comes in. I've heard in some cases like the fidget cube they made a ton of money before the cease and desist letter came in, so much that they were able pivot to stealing a few other ideas. Totally shady but legal.

That's pretty much it...it's not moral, but it's not illegal (technically), because they hadn't obtained a patent for it yet. However, morals aren't law. They are only enforced in certain settings, like in school where you're forced to practice good sportsmanship, get punished for cheating, etc. In the business world, you get rewarded (usually financially) for violating those moral codes. It's a slap in the face to the original content creator when that 24yo kid did the copycat routine & netted $300k+, but there's no one there to say "no" other than his own ambition. It's sad, but that's just how things work. Gotta learn to swim with the sharks!
 

madoka

Diamond Member
Jun 22, 2004
4,344
712
121
Here's a real life example of what I was talking about.

These guys made a keychain tool and crowdfunded it. They were pre-selling them for $32 shipped.

00cc3aae61387328a74f3185659462ed.jpg


The Chinese copied it before the inventors could even finish their funding and are selling them for $1.39 shipped!
 

feralkid

Lifer
Jan 28, 2002
16,940
5,037
136
"Here's a little economics lesson: supply and demand. You put the supply out there and the demand will follow,"
 
Nov 8, 2012
20,842
4,785
146
It only works for areas that have a large number of obedient minded drones. China is an obvious example of this.

What's the solution? Bring the low costs back home through automated manufacturing. Instead of paying the price with cheap labor but poor performance, poor support, and lots of issues - you can't get more exact than machinery. So if you want to totally rupture the cheap labor markets, fire back with automated manufacturing that puts them all out of a job. Then watch as chaos ensues.
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,975
13,936
126
www.anyf.ca
Part of the issue too is there's so many regulations and taxes here that it's very hard for small businesses to compete. China has none of that, and our laws allow them to do lot of stuff that we can't do here. Just look at how crazy the IP law system is. If you make something that's even remotely similar to another product here you'll be getting sued... but China is exempt from all that so they can copy cat all they want. It seems governments have some kind of incentive for making it easier for China to out compete us.

Then there's stuff like ULC/CSA etc. China does not need to abide by any of that, but if we create a product here, we have to.
 

ultimatebob

Lifer
Jul 1, 2001
25,134
2,450
126
I would think that building more expensive industrial grade products would be a good way to protect yourself from Chinese copycats. People will buy counterfeit watches or Michael Kors handbags, but something like a walk in freezer? I doubt it. No sane business is willing to risk a freezer full of food to a no name knockoff freezer manufacturer.
 

GagHalfrunt

Lifer
Apr 19, 2001
25,284
1,998
126
"Here's a little economics lesson: supply and demand. You put the supply out there and the demand will follow,"

Damn right! Worked great for Segue, New Coke, the Arch Deluxe, Zune, BetaMax, Google Glass and Crystal Pepsi.
 

ultimatebob

Lifer
Jul 1, 2001
25,134
2,450
126
Damn right! Worked great for Segue, New Coke, the Arch Deluxe, Zune, BetaMax, Google Glass and Crystal Pepsi.

Interesting list of products! I actually liked the Arch Deluxe and Crystal Pepsi. I also had a Zune (I got one of the infamous "refurbished" brown ones for $80 back when a comparable iPod was still $300), and I was on the waiting list for Google Glass. Probably would have got one if the dev kit didn't have a crazy $1,500 price tag.
 

BarkingGhostar

Diamond Member
Nov 20, 2009
8,410
1,617
136
I blame American cowsumers for the problem. We want our stuff and we want it cheap. Match this to corporate greed and that means stuff goes overseas to make it cheap and afford a greed-induced profit. This in turn means we must deal with the #1 nation for counterfeit products. We are the bitches of China. Until you stop buying things Made in China and stop your government from borrowing from those btards then ...

Damn, I need a drink now. :)
 
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madoka

Diamond Member
Jun 22, 2004
4,344
712
121
I blame American cowsumers for the problem. We want our stuff and we want it cheap. Match this to corporate greed and that means stuff goes overseas to make it cheap and afford a greed-induced profit. This in turn means we must deal with the #1 nation for counterfeit products. We are the bitches of China. Until you stop buying things Made in China and stop your government from borrowing from those btards then ...

In the example I used, it was $32 vs. $1.39! You're not going to ever convince many people to pay that much of a differential.

The original inventors' response was this:

Man, that sucks! Those are a total Chinese rip-off of our product! They even stole our photos (with my hand in them)! They cost us several times that price just to manufacture... If you look at the bottom photo (the one on the white background) on that listing you can see it's a poor knock off of our product and the product doesn't match our photos (the ones they stole and used in their listing) – for example the pry bar is smooth (not stepped for grip) and only machined on one side (as ours is stepped and CNC'd on both sides). Same with the box opener and apparently the cutter too, theirs is just one sided with would be terrible for performance... Not to mention all the sharp points and crooked edges and sloppy job overall. It's a very bad job on copying our design. Anyone who supports small US businesses and the Everyday Carry community shouldn't pump money into these foreign companies stealing hard worked for, intellectual property.

They did get 100 people to buy the original, but that hardly makes up for the time and effort they put into designing, manufacturing, and marketing their product.
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,975
13,936
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www.anyf.ca
I think these days we almost need to rely on the fact that some people may willingly want to pay more for the sake of buying more locally and supporting a small business, and also care about quality. I think that is the only way to compete now, need to try to get people to consider who they are supporting when they buy and to actually care about the quality of the product. Me personally I prefer to pay more if I know I'm getting better quality, but lot of people don't care.

It sort of happened here with French's Ketchup. Heinz shutdown a plant and laid off all the workers. French's bought the plant and rehired them. Now lot of people including myself switched to French's as a "FU" to Heinz and grocery stores can't keep up with demand. Something similar happened with Royal Bank, they laid off a bunch of workers to replace them with TFWs, so lot of people closed their accounts. I switched to a Caisse (basically a credit union), mortgage and all. I'm sure RBC lost lot of customers over that one. Though they probably still saved money as they can pay the TFWs less than minimum wage.

So here's hoping these movements happen more, and that people are more encouraged to buy locally and from smaller businesses. It's the only way they can survive.

Suppose there is also a quality aspect. You can buy a fully functional SMPS on Amazon for a few dollars. I can't even buy the parts to wind the transformer for that cheap, let alone the other parts. Then getting the PCBs manufactured etc. But how long will the $1 one last vs one I build myself, when it's being asked to give off it's rated current continuously? Probably not long. Some people will probably want to pay more for quality and they'll buy a PSU made by TDK Lamda or Meanwell etc even though it's more expensive.