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The Opening of this Show
1
Make a
Quantum Leap
In the Studio
HATTIE: Hi.
I'm Hattie Bryant. So often we are asked: How do you decide what companies to
study on SMALL BUSINESS SCHOOL?
We look at
many factors. What kind of business is it? Where is it located? Does it create
jobs? Is it committed to the community? But above all, we ask: Does this
company represent the best of breed?
In June of
2000, we first met Ruth Ellen Miller and her partner and father, Jack, when
Ruth Ellen was named Small Business Person of the Year from the State of
Delaware. She caught our attention because she and her father hold more than
100 patents. They moved their company to a business-friendly state, and they
have invented a product that is loved by their customers. I have never met a
pair who could more clearly teach us how to turn an idea into a profitable
business.
Step into our
Master Class in Seaford, Delaware, with Ruth Ellen and Jack Miller.
(Voiceover)
This is the new look of light, and what you see represents a technology
breakthrough.
JACK MILLER:
(Voiceover) It really is a quantum jump to go from lightbulbs to fiber optics.
And I see fiber optics as the lighting product of the future. We got this
photon approaching a lens surface at an angle.
RUTH ELLEN
MILLER:
Right.
HATTIE: (Voiceover) But the big vision to present and preserve the great art
and treasured artifacts of the world, Ruth Ellen Miller and her father Jack are
one museum at a time changing the way we see.
RUTH ELLEN:
And here's this beautiful piece of artwork and because the light is dull and
dingy and is out of balance, it's the artwork as well. Yeah, that's
interesting. I understand the history behind it, but it doesn't really excite
me. Because if I can take two things or two objects and light them side by
side, your eyes work well and suddenly you go, `I see what I've been missing.'
If they can see it, I've made a sale.
HATTIE:
(Voiceover) Ruth Ellen and Jack Miller launched their company, NoUVIR, in 1990,
and today its systems are found lighting Thomas Jefferson's handwritten draft
of the Declaration of Independence, Marilyn Monroe's white subway dress from
the "Seven Year Itch," Faberge eggs and great art in dozens of museums around
the country. With nine employees and $1 million in sales, NoUVIR builds highly
specialized lighting products specifically developed for museums. And it has
succeeded at establishing a new standard for lighting. The light has no
ultraviolet and no infrared energy; thus the source of the company's name, No
UV and no IR.
RUTH ELLEN:
Well, when you look at traditional lighting, what you discover--let's say track
lights or a lightbulb, what you find out is that most of the energy, most of
the light that comes out of that filament is something that you don't use to
see with. It's invisible. It's either infrared or it's ultraviolet. And like 94
percent of it is infrared and about another percent of it is ultraviolet.
HATTIE: And
that's manifested in heat, right?
RUTH ELLEN:
Infrared is heat. That's all it is.
HATTIE: So a
traditional light is putting out a whole bunch of heat, hurting the artwork and
not letting me see the artwork any better.
RUTH ELLEN:
Exactly.
HATTIE: So we
have a lot of waste?
RUTH ELLEN:
Right. And so what you do is with the fiber optics, you tune the light in the
fact that you have only the visible part of it. |
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Position for
Profitability
2
HATTIE: OK,
RUTH ELLEN, you're a California girl, just like me. Now what are you doing in
Delaware?
RUTH ELLEN:
I'm running a manufacturing business. And the reason is is that in California,
it would have been really hard to keep costs down. But here in Delaware, it's a
pro-business state, it's got low taxes, less regulation. And it's a better
place to do business.
HATTIE:
(Voiceover) The Millers live in this completely restored 1836 Victorian
mansion. It sits next to the NoUVIR headquarters.
RUTH ELLEN:
This house is the next step marketing wise. Come on in.

HATTIE:
(Voiceover) This is a showcase for the historic preservation community to study
how fiber-optic lighting can be used to create the feeling of the past and, at
the same time, do no harm to fabrics and wood finishes.
RUTH ELLEN:
This painting represents all my junior high, high school and my first year of
college journey. It's by Peter Elenshot. It's called "Nags Head."
HATTIE: Tell
me how this painting would look different if it had the old-fashioned--the kind
of light that most people are using right now.
RUTH ELLEN:
If you put track lighting on it, notice how white the waves are and how green
the hills. That would turn duller.
HATTIE: So
fiber optics is more like sunlight than traditional light.
RUTH ELLEN:
Yes. It's evenly balanced. There's the same amount of blue in it, the same
amount of red, the same amount of yellow. Whereas if you look at a track light,
a track light will have 10 times the red in it than it has blue. It wouldn't
quite be the same painting. It would still be beautiful. You wouldn't really
know it until you turned on the fiber optics and could compare, and then
suddenly you'd go, `Wow.'
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Prepare for
a Long-term Ramp Up
3
HATTIE: When
did you decide, `I want to own my own business'?
RUTH ELLEN:
When I had worked for Dad for about 10 years. I kept looking at what we were
doing for clients because we were in the R&D business, and we developed new
products for them. And then I heard this man talk about the problems of
museums, and I talked my Dad into saying, `Let's be our own client.' And he
said, `OK, but guess who gets to run the company? You do.'
HATTIE: So
you convinced him to walk away from a profitable business in order to join you
with your ideas.
RUTH ELLEN:
Both of us walked away from a profitable business.

JACK: Years
ago, I founded a consulting business which was devoted to developing
proprietary products for other companies, and sometimes big ones. And in doing
so, why, we managed to develop a lot of patents because we just do proprietary
stuff. We don't make just incremental changes, so we invented some things.
These now are inventions that are actually manufactured by our clients.
JACK: So
this accumulated a bunch of patents. (Voiceover) And now I've got so many
patents, the patent lawyers started hiring us as expert consultants in patent
litigation.
HATTIE: There
are millions of people--and hopefully they're all watching this show right
now--millions of Americans who invent things every day in their garages. And
they think, `I'm going to make a million dollars with this.' Why don't more
people successfully bring their ideas to the marketplace?
JACK: Well,
first of all, most inventors kid themselves and they think that all they need
to do is create an invention, maybe with a prototype, and that somebody is
going to buy it--a big company is going to buy it from them. It isn't so. They
won't acquire an outside invention. What you have to do to sell an invention is
you've got to make it and show a profit and then people are after you all the
time. They want to give you money. They want to loan you money. They want to
buy your company. We've had two options to buy our company within the last
year. And we just told them flat no. We're not interested. Don't even make an
offer.
HATTIE: How
long did it take you to get a product out the door?
RUTH ELLEN:
Well, it took us three and a half years to figure out how to make fiber optics
work so that we would have a viable product.
HATTIE: What
did you have to learn to create this product?
RUTH ELLEN:
We had to start with what was light, because there was a whole lot of myth out
there and a bunch of people teaching really old theories on how light worked.
And no one had the mechanism for how people saw or why it caused damage. When
we understood the mechanism, when we understood the science, we could apply it
and make it practical and give birth to a product. And that's really what a
high-tech product is; it's just applied science.
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Secure
Multiple Patents
4
JACK: In the
NoUVIR product line, which comprises the projector, and it is really a system
itself, and all of the different luminaries that go on the ends of the fibers.
We have 16 issued US patents. And it's usually not enough for you to have one
patent because an aggressive company will, with their attorneys' advice, often
intentionally infringe a patent.
HATTIE: Why?
Because they think they can get away with it?
JACK: Yes.
They think that they've got a 50:50 chance of beating one patent by getting it
declared invalid in court, or maybe the individual entrepreneur can't afford to
fight them in court.
HATTIE: So
this big company's attorney says, `Hey, let's just go infringe and they
probably won't be able to fight us off.'
JACK: That's
correct. But as soon as you have the second patent, then the lawyers got to
think twice, `Do I want to give advice to my client that says I have to
invalidate two patents, not one?' Now they haven't got this 50:50 chance. He's
got one chance in four. And three chances and four chances--or four patents,
and we've got 15 patents now--16 patents now. There's five on this projector
alone. Well, the possibility that a big company could successfully infringe
five patents without ending up with a multimillion dollar settlement is pretty
remote, and chances are it would never go to court.
HATTIE: OK. A
patent is...

JACK: A
patent is a monopoly that the government grants you for a certain period of
time--in this case, it's 17 years to 20 years--and what it does is it gives you
only the right to sue an infringer. The government won't help you one bit.
HATTIE: But
they've filed this document; therefore, if someone does come after you, you're
on record as owning the idea.
JACK: That's
right. But you have to warn people that it's patented, so there's patent
numbers on everything that we sell. There's patent numbers in our literature,
in our ads, in our catalog. And so you have to let people know that it's
patented. So our primary patent now is on this part of the projector, the nose,
which if you feel it, it's cold. We call it Cold Nose. And Cold Nose is our
registered trademark. And it takes the heat out of the light before it gets to
the fiber.
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Learn the
Difference Between Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights
5
HATTIE: Why
are trademarks, copyrights and patents so important? And what's the difference
in the three?
RUTH ELLEN:
Patents protect your product. They keep competitors from copying you. And
making exactly what you're making. The copyrights--that protects your
literature. That protects what you write--your catalogs, your instruction
manuals, your ads, your photographs of your products.
HATTIE: But
why do we need to copyright what we write about our products if our products
are patented?
RUTH ELLEN:
Because people will imitate your literature, and you should protect your ideas.
HATTIE: OK.
So your competitors could take your catalogs and steal your words and describe
their products...
RUTH ELLEN:
Exactly.
HATTIE:
...because we're talking about fiber optics, lighting, and they're doing some
of that, too.
RUTH ELLEN:
Sure. And then the final thing is your trademark, which is your name. And
that's what your company is called. That's the thing that identifies you. Now
for us, it's NoUVIR. And the first thing we did is we trademarked the words:
N-O-U-V-I-R. But as you use it more and more, and the public knows you by that
name, it gets stronger and stronger. And if you add a logo to it, the way it's
written, the colors that you use for it, always being the same, it gets
stronger yet. And that's why you'll find our name and our logo on every catalog
page.
HATTIE: On
every page.
RUTH ELLEN:
And then to expand it, we put it on shirts, caps, the lab coats. And we give
these to customers.
HATTIE:
Right. So the more this is used, the more powerful it is.
RUTH ELLEN:
Exactly.
HATTIE: What
are the steps I have to go through to get an official trademark?
RUTH ELLEN:
First thing is to be creative and get something unique. Then what you do is you
start using it with your specific colors, and you just put a little T-M up
there. OK. Now if it's a service, it's S-M. So if you're a travel agency or
something like that...but a trademark is for products. Then what you do is you
write or get on their Web site and talk to the Patent and Trademark Office and
get the forms. You fill out the forms. You send them examples of you using your
trademark.
HATTIE: They
say on there, `Give us your mechanical drawings.' When I saw that, I went,
`Mechanical drawings?' But that's just a picture or an example of what it is
you're trying trademark.
RUTH ELLEN:
Well, not quite. The mechanical drawing is basically your artwork so that they
can reproduce it in the Gazette and say, `Hey, anybody out there got something
similar to this?'
HATTIE:
Right.
RUTH ELLEN:
`Let us know and we'll refuse this trademark. We won't register it.'
HATTIE: So
how long does the process take from when they've got my artwork and they put it
in the Gazette--when will they...
RUTH ELLEN:
And they've got your samples. It takes about two years. And then what'll happen
is they'll register it and you'll start using an R that shows that it's
registered. You go another five years, you send more paperwork through the
Patent and Trademark Office and they say, `Yeah, nobody's talked to us about
this for five years. Looks like you're still using it because you've sent us
samples of it in usage. So we will assume that somebody can't fight it and say
that you're stomping on their ideas. We'll assume that they're your ideas.' So
you're fully registered then.
HATTIE: Did
we just add up to seven years?
RUTH ELLEN:
Seven years. But the good news about a trademark is unlike a patent that's only
got a seven-year or 20-year life, a trademark lasts for as long as your company
lasts as long as you keep using it. And the more you use it, the stronger it
gets.
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Take Time To
Protect Your Ideas
6
The
Lightbulb
HATTIE:
(Voiceover) In his book, "The Fire of Invention," Michael Novak writes about
the importance of the patent and copyright clause in the US Constitution. He
says, `During most of human history, land had been the most important source of
wealth; in America, intellect and know-how became the major source.' Abraham
Lincoln was the only president to hold a patent and thought patents would keep
the West from being dominated by wealthy land owners. More than five million
patents have been issued in the United States since the first patent law of
1790. Ruth Ellen and Jack hold over 100 of these.
The system is
working. It allows wealth to be accumulated by millions, while the old way of
doing things kept wealth in the hands of a few. Patents protect products while
copyrights and trademarks protect words and symbols, the articulation of ideas.
Ruth Ellen and Jack advise us to protect our ideas and they even tell us how to
do it. The government has put a system in place for us to protect and profit
from our inventions and ideas. You can find all the answers to your questions
at the Web site of the US Patent and Trademark Office, uspto.gov. Ruth Ellen
says, `To build a business, invent a breakthrough product, then take the time
to protect your invention.'
(Voiceover)
At SmallBusinessSchool.org, you can go deeper and learn more about all aspects
of starting and growing a business.
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Date Before
You Marry
7
Seaford is in
southern Delaware, a couple of hours from both Baltimore and Philadelphia. It
has turned out to be a great place to find excellent employees.
RUTH ELLEN:
Usually, I hire through a temporary agency and we work the person for three or
even six months and see how it happens.
HATTIE: See
if they fit. Now how does that work with the agency? Is that OK with them that
they know you're going to steal their people permanently?
RUTH ELLEN:
They think it's great. They really do because they get three to six months and
sometimes a year of income out of it because they know I'm cautious....and they
know I'm a continuing customer. They will actually call me up and say, `You
know, we've got somebody special that just kind of stumbled in the door. Can
you interview for them?'
HATTIE: Do
you ever hire people only part time?
RUTH ELLEN:
Yes. A lot of times, because as a small company, you'll have special
disciplines that are only part-time work. And the other thing, too, is that a
lot of times, I'll start people part time because it takes time out of your
schedule to train. Our biggest problem is that Dad and I sometimes talk in
shorthand. So we had to slow down and say, `OK. Now there's these added people.
They need to know where we're going and what we're doing. They need to catch
the vision, too.' And we've got a variety--very, very different kind of people.
But when you talk to them, you'll find out they all have the same vision.
They've all caught the bug.
Unidentified
Woman #1: We intend to go global. We are going places.
Unidentified
Woman #2: I'm mailing out new literature about `50 percent brighter'
performance.
HATTIE: Tell
me then, what's your goal with this piece?
Unidentified
Woman #2: For people to call us.
Unidentified
Man #1: We've been just like on the cutting edge of technology here, really.
HATTIE: So
are you having fun?
Unidentified
Man #1: I'm having fun.
JACK: We have
such a peculiar and attractive company here, that we have people standing in
line to work for us. So we have resumes for people that would love to come to
work for us. And the education, training of employees, although it takes a lot
of our time, it doesn't take it for very long, and so we have people working
productively usually within the first week or two.
RUTH ELLEN:
Basically, we're such a small company, everybody's job is to take care of the
customers. So no matter what happens--I mean, if you have to take out the
garbage--it's everybody's job. But this is how I keep people from stepping on
each other's territories and on their toes, and this is how I delegate.
HATTIE: At
what point did you start putting things in writing for employees? When you got
your first one, did you write a job description or you just sort of verbally...
RUTH ELLEN:
Didn't need to. But by the time we got to about the second or third person, we
had to start dividing up tasks.
HATTIE: So
you don't see the people part of your business being an obstacle to growth.
JACK: Not at
all. No.
HATTIE: And
you don't see finance being an obstacle to growth.
JACK: Not at
all. We did it out of profits.
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Teach to
Sell
8
HATTIE: So
the only thing standing between you and getting huge is educating...
JACK: Time. It takes time. We give seminars four
or five times a year by invitation to a major museum or a museum association
and we contribute our time. It takes time. We do a full day of teaching. It
takes usually a day to get there and a day to get home. And we contribute that
time free. But they'll pay our travel expenses. And they'll typically invite 50
to 100 people and charge them $50 to $100 each to attend the seminar, pay our
expenses, put on a nice luncheon buffet and everybody learns something. And
then there'll typically be 12 or 13 museums represented in that group, and a
few months later, we start getting the increase.
HATTIE: All
right. I wanted to ask about the link, the sales cycle, because a lot of small
business owners get very frustrated with the link of time it takes to close a
deal.
HATTIE: So
how do you make it from, you know, to getting the deal? You go out there and
you spend all your time and money and effort to make a sale and it doesn't come
for a year.
JACK:
Patience. That's about--the gestation period is about a year.
HATTIE:
(Voiceover) Jayne Armstrong is the district director of the Small Business
Administration.
JAYNE
ARMSTRONG (Small Business Administration): Delaware's state slogan is Smaller,
Quicker, Smarter, and I think NoUVIR research more than any other small
business really represents that, because they moved in--relocated to Delaware
from out of state, and they have certainly grown, and they are the leading
manufacturer of fiber-optic lighting in the nation.
HATTIE:
(Voiceover) We went to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, to
ask the curator, Ted Spencer, why he installed NoUVIR's products.
TED SPENCER
(Baseball Hall of Fame): Well, for about 10 years now, we've been moving
towards trying to be a much more conservation-conscious museum. I mean, these
cases that you see here were like pizza ovens 20 years ago and now, you know,
they're totally neutral. And it's a wonderful step forward.
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Smile At
Your Problems
9
HATTIE: OK,
Jack, you have a problem to solve this morning.
JACK: Yes.
HATTIE: What
is it?

JACK: Well,
we were specified for the lighting in the National Archives for the original
signed Declaration of Independence and for the Constitution.
HATTIE: The
Constitution.
JACK: The
Constitution.
HATTIE: Did
you all just jump up and down and get goose bumps or what?
JACK: We did
indeed. We were really excited. We wanted to do that job for many years. What
they have asked us to do--they've given us a specification, and the
specification was there could be no light in there of a shorter wave length
than 500 nanometers. Here's the color portion, the visible light portion of the
whole electromagnetic spectrum that includes ultraviolet, infrared, etc.Well,
we automatically get rid--just because we're NoUVIR, we get rid of the
ultraviolet already and the infrared. So we're only looking at the visible
spectrum, except that they don't want anything shorter than 500 nanometers.
So I had to
find a filter that supplements this. So what I found then was a dichroic
filter. What a dichroic filter does--I've got one here. This is the one I
selected. And if you can see that in the camera, you can see it flashes blue.
HATTIE: I see
the blue.
JACK: OK. And
what it's doing is it's reflecting the blue light. But if you look through
it...
HATTIE: It's
yellow.
JACK: ...it's
yellow. So it's not letting any blue light through. And what I actually did is
I took then, to verify it--I took one of our optical fibers and I shined it
through this filter on to this simulated old document ...and it just gave a
nice, bright, warm, yellowish light on it, which is exactly what they want. So
what I did then is I faxed it to the contractor who's doing the installation.
So he can now tell the National Archives that, yes, the problem is solved, and
this will do it, and we'll guarantee that there's no light shorter wave length
than 500 nanometers.
HATTIE: So
this was fun.
JACK: This is
a blast. This is really fun. And it will be such fun to go see the thing.
HATTIE: Why
is it that the two of you work so well together?
RUTH ELLEN: I
respect him. I love him. He respects me. I mean, good grief, he allowed his kid
to take over and become his boss, basically. I understand the science
perspective. I've paid my dues. He understands the artist. And so it's just
this beautiful blending of aesthetics and science. If it's giving up an
electron...
HATTIE:
(Voiceover) Breakthroughs happen when smart people who care about something put
their minds to answering the question: How can this problem be solved? We've
seen it through history and we're seeing it right now.
JACK:
(Voiceover) No Noble Prize for you, kid. You're through right now.
HATTIE:
Remember, Ruth Ellen says, `To build a business, invent a breakthrough product,
then take the time to protect your invention.' We'll see you next
time.
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The Closing of the Show.
We invite your
comments, suggestions and
questions.
Go to
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