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Ask HN: would you pay $199 to survive the zombie apocalypse?

7 点作者 nooron将近 11 年前
My friends and I like to build full-stack (food, tools, aid, the works) emergency kits for ourselves.<p>Now we&#x27;d like to bring emergency preparation to folks beyond your crazy but well-intentioned uncle. We&#x27;d like to start by offering a 2-person, 3-meal-a-day, 1-month kit for $199.<p>I&#x27;d really appreciate your feedback below. If you&#x27;re feeling generous, we&#x27;d graciously accept your email on our landing page:<p>www.prep4.us<p>Thanks a bunch, HN.

8 条评论

RogerL将近 11 年前
No, I wouldn&#x27;t.<p>Why? Because I already can do this, and I haven&#x27;t. The internet is full of survival gear&#x2F;food packages, and I haven&#x27;t bought any of them. Therefore, the odds of me doing it with your company is about zero. I suspect this holds true for most people; if so, what is your acquisition cost for a customer?<p>And then I wonder about your margins. You are selling 180 meals for $200, which means your food price must be somewhere around 50 cents&#x2F;meal for this to be viable to you (and I think I&#x27;m being generous; I suspect the price has to be lower - see acquisition costs above). How are you providing all those calories for so little money? Your website offers to harvest my email, not inform me, so I am admittedly in the dark here.<p>Do I just throw the food away at the end of the year? What is the food - is it something I&#x27;d <i>want</i> to eat? Is this not a problem I can solve by going to Costco and buying a bunch of boxes of pasta and tinned tuna? These are the questions that run through my brain.<p>In a real disaster, my problem is going to be potable water.
wikwocket将近 11 年前
I think you&#x27;ll have much better success pitching this as a readiness kit for natural disasters, or even to paranoid readiness nuts, than to zombie fiction fans.<p>There is clearly interest in products like this, based on big ticket items I see like home generators, canned food collections, solar-powered appliances, etc. Not exactly mainstream but for the right price point, you could pitch it as a cheap insurance policy.<p>I think what would be key would be clearly communicating all the cool stuff you include in the kit, what disasters it would enable you to survive&#x2F;thrive in, and how, like a life insurance policy, this allows you to simply not worry about $RARE_EVENTUALITY_X.<p>Also important will be getting this in front of the right people. Find out where preparedness junkies congregate online, observe their discussions, and ask them what they think.
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joezydeco将近 11 年前
Lots of companies are doing this already, so do your research.<p><a href="http://beprepared.com/essential-gear/emergency-kits-1.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;beprepared.com&#x2F;essential-gear&#x2F;emergency-kits-1.html</a><p><a href="http://beprepared.com/food-storage/year-supplies-and-combos.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;beprepared.com&#x2F;food-storage&#x2F;year-supplies-and-combos....</a><p>If you can offer a 1-month kit for $199 that might be an advantage. What type of food do you offer for such a low price?
JSeymourATL将近 11 年前
Afraid asking HN is the wrong target. Suggest pinging the Zombie Fan Sites, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/TheWalkingDeadZombieFanPage" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.facebook.com&#x2F;TheWalkingDeadZombieFanPage</a>
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mattmoss将近 11 年前
$199 to survive fiction? More seriously, website doesn&#x27;t load.
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coralreef将近 11 年前
A lot of great points in this thread. Definitely a good idea to find a niche, as your biggest differentiator will be marketing.
fadiyahya将近 11 年前
Cool idea. Yet, needs a better positioning. There is a Domain problem :(<p>Double check
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lifeisstillgood将近 11 年前
I was about to come in with some dumb answer about expected value, but I actually think this is a neat idea.<p>I often worry (not a lot) about letting my family down being unprepared should there be some real bad disaster, and so I would be interested in a couple of packages like below:<p>* Holiday first aid and disaster kit and training My son recently cut his chin open in Greece and I realised I knew nothing about stitches, keeping them dry, had not got steri strips or bandages. Most people would pay decent cash for a holiday specific package (going to this country? You need these injections, got children of three years old - have a selection of these sterile what nots) Throw in a private YouTube showing how to use them and I would pay up (of course too late now but that&#x27;s the market to go for :-) maybe insurance companies sell my data?)<p>* the civilisation collapses at home package - I don&#x27;t have enough tinned goods and stuff to last. Not do I have enough water or first aid. Sell me big box to go in the garage that lasts three months (which is what I think you are doing) and I might be interested.<p>* sell me some sensible prep - like where to meet if the local oil refinery catches fire and we cannot get to our house, evacuation kits that are stored at some place sensible. Seems a bit odd<p>I like the idea of being prepared - and would pay for a book to tell me how, and a weekend to do it. Being prepared on holiday is a much more realistic market and I think worth investigating - but as for zombie apocalypse - nice selling point, but I think it&#x27;s going to be a loss leader to establish credibility