Start-ups: Best Buy wants to sell your products — stat.
Not only that, the largest electronics retailer in the U.S. wants to make it easier for entrepreneurs and early-stage companies to get their products loaded onto its website and into customers' hands. Some of those gadgets could possibly end up in stores, too.
"Your product vision could be the spark of genius we're looking for," the retailer says on its website in a pitch under the new initiative, dubbed Best Buy Ignite.
If selected, Best Buy will hook up the start-ups with PCH, a multinational product innovation company, to help with product development, manufacturing, marketing, packaging and inventory management.
Best Buy will then feature those products on a special section of its website devoted to start-ups.
The initiative is reminiscent of Amazon's move last year to create Launchpad, a dedicated space on its website to highlight products from start-ups. It also aims to streamline the process of getting loaded on its site.
"We've been working with start-ups for years," said Carly Charlson, a Best Buy spokeswoman. "We want to make it easier and faster for our customers to get their hands on the products."
A curated group of about a dozen such products are already on display in a special section of Best Buy's Silicon Valley store, which recently moved from Sunnyvale to Google's hometown of Mountain View, Calif. The 450-square-foot area currently highlights a selection of crowdfunded gadgets such as the Tangram smart rope and the RoBo 3-D printer, wearable technology from Under Armour and smart headphones and earphones from Muzik and Bragi.