You’ve done your homework, you want full control, and you are committed to taking your invention forward.
With our inventing services, the financial investment is your responsibility. and you maintain 100% control of everything from product development to commercialization.
Licensing is the easiest path to profit: get paid while others turn your idea into a product and manage the day-to-day grind.
With licensing, someone else is the invests in your idea and maintains control. Our Brutally Honest Review is a smart and honest way to start your licensing journey.
Our extensive library of invention resources has been developed over more than 20 years to help inventors make great decisions.
Browse our Resource Library for Inventors and build your knowledge about everything from NDA's & confidentiality agreements to patents, licensing, manufacturing and more.
Products created and commercialized by Invention City and its partners have generated over $500,000,000 in retail sales and tens of millions in royalty income. We are actively looking to license new inventions in all categories and all stages of development. When we say "yes" we offer to do it all and pay for everything so that you risk nothing more - we take responsibility for patents, prototypes, engineering, design and marketing, to turn your new invention idea into a manufactured product with a real opportunity for market success. The first step to working with us is our Brutally Honest Review. Click to see the video and read our fine print in bold.
Starting as garage inventors we've had over 25 years of experience creating, developing, licensing and selling inventions to Fortune 100 corporations and start-up companies. This gives us deep first hand knowledge of prior art research, market evaluation, building prototypes, engineering for manufacturing, industrial design, writing and filing US and international patents and trademarks, defending patents and trademarks in the US and internationally, negotiating licensing agreements, managing licensing relationships, sourcing and managing manufacturing and fulfillment, marketing via traditional distribution to mass merchants, chains, individual retailers, direct marketing via DRTV, internet and crowd funding, forming strategic partnerships and launching and selling start-up companies. We don't know of anyone in our industry who's had our breadth and depth of experience. We've enjoyed a lot of success and have learned from failures too. Learn more about us here.
Over the years we've heard from inventors who've wasted thousands, tens of thousands and even hundreds of thousands of dollars pursuing their dreams and failing. Invention City's mission is to help inventors keep money in their pockets, increase their chances of success and commercialize great new product ideas through licensing and partnership deals. The Invention City team is comprised of successful inventors and entrepreneurs who've made their money by bringing new patented products to market. We want to make money with you, not from you. Read about us here .
Lies don't fly.
Choosing Invention City
The difference between Invention City and other invention companies is the success, depth and unique experiences of the Invention City team along with a business model that's structured to profit with inventors rather than from them. Invention City grew out of WorkTools, Inc., (read about WorkTools here.) We come at this business having been bona fide garage inventors and that's where our hearts remain. These links explain:
We believe that inventors should do as much as they can on their own and then, when informed and ready, seek help and advice from providers who genuinely care. Our Brutally Honest Review is a great way to get professional feedback and a real chance for success. A visit to the info booth is a good way to get started. Be careful about disclosing proprietary and confidential information to anyone. We hope that your visit is productive. Please visit us often and let us know how we can make things better.
Invention City provides inventors and new product idea developers with information, resources and help for each stage of the inventing process. Use the links above to learn how to:
A trademark is a great way to add protection for your invention when you go to market. Its far less expensive than a patent and far easier to enforce, but it covers just the identity of the product. Here is a quick overview: Types of Trademarks: Word Marks: These protect your brand name itself. For example, if your invention is called "The Super Scrubber," registering this as a word mark prevents others from using that exact name for similar products. Cost-Saving Tip: Start with a strong, unique name that's less likely to face opposition from existing trademarks, reducing potential legal ...
Copyright is an underutilized form of protection by inventors. It has some great things going for it: It is free (but registering for $65 can be worthwhile)It lasts for a lifetime + 70 yearsThere's no examination, no renewals or maintenance fees In the following vlog I discuss how inventors might use it: Copyright exists automatically when you create a work of art, take a photograph, write music, write a book or a blog post, make a video or a movie. Copyright protects buildings, sculpture and choreography. If something incorporates "artistic expression" that artistic expression can be protected by copyright. With ...
Prandtl Dynamics was founded by students in Toronto Summary of reporting in the Wall Street Journal (10/19/24) by Alistair Macdonald:Earlier this year, a team of four University of Toronto students—Parth Mahendru, Anna Poletaeva, Michael Acquaviva, and Asad Ishaq—developed a low-cost anti-drone device using ultrasound waves, outperforming major defense companies like Boeing in a military tech competition. Their device, built from car speakers and developed at home with $17,000 of their own funds, destabilizes drone navigation systems mid-flight, causing them to crash or veer off course. The students named their startup Prandtl Dynamics after aerospace pioneer Ludwig Prandtl. Despite limited resources ...
In the video above, what the invention does is explained within 7 seconds Make Your Point Quickly and Use a Generic Soundtrack. To move your invention forward, it's essential to clearly explain it to partners, investors, licensees, retailers and customers. Your explanation should be brief, and 95% of the time, it should focus on what the invention does—not how it works or why it was created. For some inventions, a single image may suffice, but most will benefit from a short video, ideally under a minute. A classic video structure is to first present the problem your invention solves ...
Never give up. Never give in. So long as the fight is worth it. One of my pearls of wisdom to every inventor is that they should find the one thing that will cause them to give up and attack that thing first. If they get past that first killer, move on to the next and then the next. Typically those things are:#1 Confirm there's a market#2 Confirm it can be manufactured at a profitable price#3 Confirm intellectual property opportunities/risks Jump those three hurdles and you probably have an invention worth fighting for. The question then becomes, how long do ...