Showing posts with label Into. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Into. Show all posts

Friday, November 25, 2011

Do You Have A Great Idea That Could Make You Rich? How To Make Your Dream Into A Reality

Clearwater, FL (PRWEB) October 1, 2005

In 2002, A.C. Wilson, a contractor from Tennessee, heard his brother-in-law complain about being ticketed in New Jersey under the new “idling” law. The recent legislation is intended to reduce pollution from trucks that idle on the side of the road, by making the practice illegal. Truckers are in the habit of leaving the engine running while they sleep, in order to keep the heat or air conditioning on inside their cabs, but this contributes to pollution and wastes millions of gallons of diesel fuel each year.


Wilson has a knack for working with electricity, and soon he came up with an idea for a portable power pack to help truckers stay comfortable while the engine is shut down. He shared his idea with his brother-in-law, who used the first unit on his own rig. Today Wilson is the CEO of IdleAire Technologies Corporation, a company poised to revolutionize the trucking industry by renting and selling the alternative power units. Truck fleets, travel plazas, and government environmental and highway safety agencies are buying the invention like hot cakes. Wilson’s award-winning idea has already saved millions of gallons of diesel fuel and is helping to improve air quality nationwide.


Meanwhile, building contractor Rob Moody of Black Mountain, North Carolina has been filling the tank on his diesel powered pickup truck with fuel made from recycled cooking oil. When fast food restaurants are ready to throw away the oil they use to fry fish and French fries, Moody shows up and collects it from them. Then he converts it into “bio diesel”. While fuel costs are rising in town, he is driving around on free grease. Soon his brand of fuel may be available at the pump, although for the time being it is still in the early stages of development.


Moody, Wilson, and other “green inventors” around the world are working on products that could not only save our environment, but also rescue a precarious economy. But getting ideas to market can be a daunting task, especially when patents and manufacturing contracts are involved. Many significant inventions that could give the USA a needed boost will never see the light of day, as they languish under a mountain of red tape.


LeAnn Bell and her husband, a former Major League Baseball player, learned that for themselves, when they wanted to get their invention – a special seat designed to help athletes and others reduce knee and back strain – patented and sold. Although Bell has a business management degree from Pepperdine University, she didn’t have a clue how to proceed. “In college they didn’t tell us how to turn an idea into a product,” she says. Eventually, she and her husband figured out the complicated process for themselves; and now their invention is even used by Gold Medal Olympic teams.


After she and her husband got their special seat to market, Bell concentrated on writing a simple how-to guide to assist other new inventors. The booklet Make Your Idea Happen - an Easy to Understand Guide explains the nuts and bolts of prototypes, patents, manufacturing procedures, and licensing contracts. The concise but information-rich text may turn out to be one of the best inventions yet, because it explains every step in the complex process of how to transform a good idea into a great consumer product.


And who knows? One of Bell’s readers might invent the fuel of the future, so that we don’t have to worry about pollution or gas prices as we sit in an ergonomic chair and write the next bestseller.


For a review copy of the book or to set up an interview with LeAnn Bell for a story, please contact Jay Wilke at 727-443-7115, ext. 223.


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Find More College Books To Rent Press Releases

Compromise is the Key When Mom and Dad Need Help Support Turns Surviving into Thriving

Omaha, NE (Vocus) August 19, 2010

Nancy Witzeling had one heart-to-heart talk after another with her 90-year-old mother who has dementia. Staying at home alone is not a good idea, she pointed out. I told her, You cannot stay by yourself, and she would become very angry. She could not remember that she could not remember.


When Janet Bullards mother started showing dementia symptoms, her father whod had a long and prestigious medical career dedicated himself to caring for her. That was until he started needing help as well. My dad was taking over more and more, and didnt have the background to understand what needed to be done, Bullard said. Initially, professional caregivers who came in to assist were incompatible.


Although they are a country apart, Witzeling, an American long-distance family caregiver and home-based graphic designer, and Canadian Janet Bullard, a senior-care professional who lives just three blocks from her parents, face many of the same issues. Both families are representative of the varied reasons that seniors resist assistance, from invasion of privacy to fear of change. Likewise, both have found ways to turn resistance into assistance by tapping into community resources, their professional backgrounds and common sense.


The Home Instead Senior Care