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Last updated: 06:52 AM EDT
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Accidental invention
Thursday, October 17, 2002
By Kevin Keenan Telegram & Gazette Staff
WESTBORO-- After spending about five years drifting
between dot-com startups and raising nearly $100 million, marketing
specialist Mark Anderson found himself on his couch watching Oprah, with
his young boys whirling around him blasting each other with toy laser
guns. Unemployed and nowhere near a
dot-com millionaire, Mr. Anderson and his son Sean had a “Eureka!” moment. While his sons
shot each other with their laser toys, he joined the fray, shooting back
with his television remote, which seemed to work. Mr. Anderson said he
told the boys they could invent a similar laser game that kept score and
involved multiple players, unlike the relatively unsophisticated game they
played in the den that day. “After
helping companies raise about $100 million and make only $7 million, I found myself
unemployed,” Mr. Anderson said. “This is what you would call
an accidental invention.” Two years after
the dot-com implosion, Mr. Anderson and his sons are marketing their
invention, called TinyTag, which will be available on a limited basis
in some area stores this Christmas. Mr.
Anderson has multiple trademarks, including one for the game and another
for the name SeanO Toys, the company he created to sell and market the
product. A patent is pending for the game
itself. Mr. Anderson and his sons Sean,
8, and James, 11, with the help of friends and neighbors, including
Matthew Von-Maszewski and his uncle, Bob Bragg, a researcher at the
Johnson Space Center in Houston, made a prototype of the laser tag game in
a toaster oven. A neighbor wrote software and another acquaintance crafted
the electronics. The components and wires were soldered together then
baked onto a circuit board in the toaster
oven. “Uncle Bob and I talked on the
telephone several times to discuss how to properly power TinyTag,”
said Matthew. “We worked through various battery type capabilities. I then
experimented with circuits and changes to the toy's software. The end
results amaze even me.” The game is
simple. Two or more players zap each other with the handheld units. The
units have a transmitter and a receiver to both shoot “lasers” and record
hits from others. Once a transmitter records seven green lights, or
scores, that player wins. If a player's receiver registers seven hits or
red lights, that player loses. The game
comes packaged with two units and will retail for $14.99, Mr. Anderson
said. Once the prototype was made, the Andersons hired a Japanese company
to design and manufacture microprocessors for the game. The
microprocessors were shipped to a Chinese company where they were
assembled, packaged and shipped back to the United
States. The Andersons have a deal to sell
them at the The Whiz on Route 9 in Westboro and have other deals pending
with other area toy stores, Mr. Anderson
said. Mr. Anderson and his sons learned
much about starting a business and marketing toys -- and now they are
learning even more about the vagaries of international commerce. The
10,500 members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union recently
went on strike for 10 days, which closed all 29 ports on the Pacific
coast. The Andersons ordered 25,000
TinyTag games from the Chinese manufacturer, but most of the games
remain aboard an idle container ship anchored in the Chinese port of
Yinkou because of the strike. The ship has been unable to make its
delivery because of a heavy backup at the U.S.
ports. As a result, the bulk of the
Andersons' initial order will not make it to area stores by Christmas, Mr.
Anderson said. He said about 4,000 units will be on the shelves before
Christmas. Mr. Anderson has devised a
marketing strategy for TinyTag similar to the extreme sports
industry. Through a Web site, www.seano.com, and the words of Sean and
James, youths will be encouraged to join the company's “Street Team,”
which will pitch the game to their peers by word of mouth.
Once they become team members, youths
will be encouraged to market the game to classmates and neighborhood
friends. In exchange, they can earn a discount on company merchandise and
get free T-shirts, bumper stickers and other logoed paraphernalia. The
game won't be marketed in Westboro schools, however, (Sean is in the
second grade at Annie E. Fales School; James is a sixth-grader at the Mill
Pond School) because the town's schools forbid bringing toys from home,
James Anderson said.
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