. . . . . maybe something silly like “advertising”? (That is, advertising something other than cubelets?)
Advertising? What a concept!
Maybe, just maybe, advertise in relevant venues like a Raspberry Pi magazine, (MagPi or something?), or in something that robot aficionados read? Arrange for a good review or two? Heck! I’ll write one!
Maybe in Nuts & Volts or a robotics magazine?
Popular Science?
Teaching magazines?
Maybe some cleverly applied social media?
Maybe go on a road-show, visiting science museums, libraries, or the occasional shopping mall doing FPV robot races? (While bringing some robot kits to sell? )
How about places like Micro Center? They LOVE stuff like that, especially around the holidays.
No matter what I see in the hobby robotics field, I am still struck by the sheer “bang for the buck” of the GoPiGo robot.
Given its mixture of capabilities and price, it’s difficult to beat. Possibly not impossible, but difficult, nonetheless.
Another thing:
Why not advertise some of these great GoPiGo success stories on the GoPiGo web site? Or hire someone to give that site a bit of “zing!”? Right now it’s a bit difficult to navigate and is something of a snooze-fest as far as creating excitement is concerned.
Until MR starts to take the GoPiGo robot seriously, it’s going to remain the ignored step-sister sleeping by the fire, waiting and waiting for a handsome prince to rescue it.
Since I can’t afford to buy Cublets, (they’re hundreds of dollars for a small handful that is barely functional), I can’t speak to their build quality, but if it’s anything like the attention they pay to the cublets as compared to the GoPiGo, the cublets are probably pristine.
This raises a significant issue: How many people have we lost as potential customers/users/brand advocates due to poor build quality? How many educational institutions have scrapped any ideas of using the GoPiGo because of this?
As I have read in many different media forums, (including college courses), gaining trust and credibility is a long, time-consuming process but credibility and trust can be lost in an instant.
============ Footnotes ============
There are times like this when I wish I could buy DI out from under MR, and start paying attention to the robot again. I still cannot imagine for the life of me why in God’s Holy Name they let the GiggleBot slip away. ()
</Frustration induced rant>
[Edit save delayed due to construction-induced power failure.]
One thing that could be done is to collaborate with various colleges, universities, technical centers or schools, (etc.), and create a weekend, week, or couple of weeks robotics course featuring the GoPiGo.
I’ve been watching for your article in Hackspace, MagPi, and Medium (but I hate when folks choose to self-publish on Medium - have to sign-up to read).