Company: Wi-Gear, Inc.
Contact: Mark Pundsack, President and CEO
Location: San Francisco, CA
Industry: Retail, Consumer Electronics (B2C)
Annual revenue: Confidential
Number of employees: Confidential

Quick Read:

Wi-Gear, an independent manufacturer formed in 2004, was focused on one product—a wireless Bluetooth headset—geared toward the Apple iPod. Wi-Gear had a very small sales and marketing budget and no outside capital. It needed to grow its distribution from just online sales to other retail outlets, preferably Apple Stores themselves.

Plenty of competitors also made wireless headphones for iPods, and they too wanted to get into Apple's stores. What if Wi-Gear couldn't get a meeting, or couldn't convince Apple to carry its product? The company wanted to be sure early on that it had a market for its product. So it set up a Web site even before its product was in final production, and set out to spread the word virally.

Wi-Gear founder and CEO Mark Pundsack sent information about his product to friends, business associates and blogs specializing in communication products. Soon a key mention on engadget.com got picked up on 100 other blogs—including those in other languages—and eventually netted him dozens of pre-orders.

That gave him the confidence to continue production, and to show Apple—when he eventually got his coveted meeting—that real customers were ready to buy his product.

The Challenge:

Independent manufacturer Wi-Gear produces one product—a wireless headset for iPods and Bluetooth cell phones—called iMuffs, as in earmuffs for iPods. To gain crucial credibility—and sales—Wi-Gear needed its iMuffs to be sold in Apple Stores. But it had almost no marketing budget, and it was competing against numerous manufacturers that also wanted their wireless headphones to be sold in Apple Stores.

Wi-Gear founder and CEO Mark Pundsack worked tirelessly to get a meeting with the person at Apple who was in charge of buying iPod accessories for Apple stores. At the same time, he needed to drive traffic to his Web site in order to convince himself and his investors that he had a viable product.

The Campaign:

Pundsack formed his company Wi-Gear in late 2004 with a mission to develop a wireless headphone for iPods that could offer superior sound quality and an easy user experience. Although the headsets were still being developed, he launched his Web site in May 2005 to describe the features of his iMuffs.

Initially, the site was getting about two dozen hits a day. Then Pundsack submitted news about the iMuffs to engagdet.com, a popular consumer technology blog site. Engadget wrote one paragraph about the product on May 24, 2005, along with a picture and a link to the Wi-Gear Web site.

Immediately, Wi-Gear's site traffic skyrocketed, first to 1,000 hits, then 5,000 hits and ultimately hitting a peak of 20,000. Pundsack discovered that the one engadget.com mention was linked to at least 100 other blogs, including some in foreign languages. "We got lucky with the timing," Pundsack acknowledged.

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Case Study: How a Tiny Manufacturer Convinced Apple to Stock Its Product and Tripled Sales

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