Payton Needs a Prototype
Abstract
On a hot July evening in the summer of 2022, Payton Mackey was walking back to her summer sublet in London, Ontario, Canada, frustrated and leafing through her prototype sketches. She had several product designs for her business, Fidgetry, and was anxious to get a physical product in her hands to show prospective customers. Her entrepreneurship program mentor had asked her why a prototype was so important. 'I need to physically hold it; I need to know exactly what it will be before I can proceed', Mackey had proclaimed. 'How can I get customer feedback, build marketing materials, or do forecasting if I don't have one?'. Mackey is a student in an entrepreneurship incubator who is exploring how to get a physical prototype made for her business idea. She explores various means of production, including CNC, mold and additive production and the use of CAD files. She also explores the benefits and drawbacks of local, national, and international manufacturing and the idea of outsourcing as part of a business model.