Edmonton Journal

Inventors club helps bring ideas closer to market

Concept borne from the desire to gather like-minded people together for support

- JURIS GRANEY jgraney@postmedia.com twitter.com/jurisgrane­y

David Bayda no longer has the invention notepad he owned when he was 12 — like everyone, he’s gone digital — but he still remembers the product that graced its opening page, his first invention.

It was a hairbrush that dispensed water when you squeezed the handle to make it easier for him to comb his hair.

It wasn’t that the now 34-yearold had wild and woolly hair — quite the opposite.

“But it seemed inefficien­t to constantly put the brush under the faucet and brush it through my hair,” Bayda said. “I thought there had to be a better way.”

That creative attitude has stuck with Bayda and led him to found Edmonton Inventor’s Group about five years ago.

“I tried to find an inventors’ club in Edmonton and couldn’t find one,” he said. “I knew there’d be other inventors out there and I wanted to have a community group that we could all come together, share our ideas, and support each other.”

THE COLLECTIVE MIND

Now, up to 20 people meet every two to three months to share their knowledge.

And the number of spaces that are receptive to a group of visionarie­s is also expanding. Makerspace­s and hackerspac­es continue to pop up around the city.

Places like the Edmonton New Technology Society, located at 6740 121 Ave. NW, allow inventors access to everything from wood and metal machinery equipment to an electronic­s lab, pottery studio and 3D printers.

Access to equipment is just one facet of the inventors’ group, Bayda said.

Members also get help with informatio­n on everything from patents to marketing, intellectu­al property issues and distributi­on.

PRODUCTS TO MARKET

Bayda said members of the group are working on a variety of items including men’s hygiene products, oil and gas technology, odour control and reduction products and app developmen­ts.

“We bring in people who have never invented and others who have brought products to market and they help mentor other inventors,” he said. “This is about bringing people together to try and get an idea to market and to bring it to life.

“There’s more to be gained by sharing your idea than what you would lose by sharing it.

“Once people realize how much time, money, resources, energy you have to pour into make an idea and bring it to life, people will quickly shy away from it.”

The secret to inventing, Bayda said, is perseveran­ce.

“The hardest thing is really being committed to your product and knowing what it takes to bring it to life,” he said. “I think people might give up prematurel­y or underestim­ate what it takes to get it going.”

 ?? GREG SOUTHAM ?? David Bayda and other members of the Edmonton Inventor’s Club get together regularly to support each other and tap into resources to help make their ideas reality.
GREG SOUTHAM David Bayda and other members of the Edmonton Inventor’s Club get together regularly to support each other and tap into resources to help make their ideas reality.

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