Boost Your Brand
By David Port of Entrepreneur.com

Inventor Michael Boehm's instincts told him the concept he had been shopping to various manufacturers -- a portable contact grill that cooks food items faster and more healthfully -- had great promise. So why couldn't he find a corporate partner to help take the product to market?
The rest, as they say, is history. Boehm targeted boxer George Foreman to be the spokesperson for the concept. "I knew he ate two burgers before every fight and that he and his sons were all burger freaks," he says. "To me, he was a perfect fit to represent the product."
After checking out a prototype of the grill, the Foreman camp agreed it was a good match, and the heavyweight signed on to represent the product. Soon thereafter, with Foreman's muscle behind the grill, Boehm found a company, Salton, to take it to market. Now, 14 years after Salton rolled out the George Foreman Grill, it has sold a whopping 100 million units.
The Foreman grill has become a textbook example of how enduringly valuable a high-profile spokesperson can be when that person is carefully selected and wisely deployed in the scheme of a marketing strategy. It's also proof that investing in a "name" pitch person isn't just for large corporations with deep pockets.
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