iRobot: Colin Angle. How The Roomba Became a Household Icon

irobot:科林·安格尔。罗姆巴如何成为家庭图标

How I Built This with Guy Raz

2026-04-13

1 小时 3 分钟
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单集简介 ...

Colin Angle didn’t start out trying to clean people’s floors. He started out trying to shape the future–with robots.  In the early days of iRobot, there was no business model. No steady funding. No clear customer. Just a belief that robotic technology would one day make the world a better place.  In the early days, the company built babbling toy dolls for Hasbro, and roving bomb-detectors for the military. But for more than a decade… nothing truly took off.  Until one idea—a robot vacuum—finally did.  With the Roomba, iRobot created a category from scratch, and a product that felt almost like a member of the family. Tens of millions of units sold, and the Roomba became part of popular culture.  But to avoid stagnation, iRobot had to sell to a bigger company. When a lucrative deal with Amazon fell through, the company hit a wall–and never recovered.    This is a story about building a business in survival mode, creating a household icon, and eventually getting bested by forces beyond your control.  What You’ll Learn  How to launch a company when you’re not sure who your customers areWhy iRobot engineers underestimated marketing (and paid for it later)How piles of Cheerios helped sell the RoombaHow iRobot shored up customer loyalty when the Roomba faltered Why even a hero product is not enough to sustain a companyHow competition–and regulation–can unravel a businessTimestamps  7:25 - “What have you built?”: The robotics lab job application. 12:25 - iRobot’s early business model: contracts, not consumers. 25:05 - Breaking into the toy market: The doll with a mind of its own. 36:10 - A key cleaning insight: people will pay hundreds—but only if it vacuums. 39:10 - The office Cheerios demo that won a retailer. 44:20 - A soaring launch, then stagnation: 250,000 vacuums stuck in inventory. 46:10 - The ad (for Pepsi!) that turbocharged Roomba.   55:55 - The need to diversify: robotic scrubbers, mops, pool cleaners?  58:00 - The $1.7 billion offer from Amazon–and how it unraveled. 1:03:40 - Life after Roomba.  This episode was produced by Katherine Sypher with music composed by Ramtin Arablouei. It was edited by Neva Grant with research help from Noor Gill. Our engineers were Patrick Murray and Kwesi Lee.  Follow How I Built This: Instagram → @howibuiltthis X → @HowIBuiltThis Facebook → How I Built This Follow Guy Raz: Instagram → @guy.raz Youtube → guy_raz X → @guyraz Substack → guyraz.substack.com Website → guyraz.com See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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  • Certainly the dream was, let's be honest, we were promised robots.

  • We humans were promised robots.

  • Yes, we were going to build robots.

  • And everyone asked for a robot vacuum cleaner from the very first day.

  • Wait, when you would meet people, they'd say, oh, when is Rosie, like from the Jetsons, going to be in my house?

  • When are you going to clean my floor?

  • Welcome to How I Built This, a show about innovators,

  • entrepreneurs, idealists, and the stories behind the movements they built.

  • I'm Guy Raz, and on the show today, how Colin Engel set out to make robots part of our daily lives and brought us

  • one of the most iconic home helpers ever, the Roomba.

  • If you think about it, there are very few products that manage to cross over from being purely functional

  • into something that feels almost cultural.

  • The kinds of things that don't just solve a problem, but actually take on a personality of their own.

  • Something that people don't just use, but talk about and share videos and form a kind of relationship with.

  • And for the past 20 years or so, one of those products has been a small,

  • round, slightly hypnotic robot that quietly makes its way across your living room floor and sweeps up dirt.

  • Now, what's interesting about the Roomba isn't just that it works.

  • It's that it almost feels alive.

  • It bumps and turns and adapts to every corner of your house.

  • It's been parodied by Dave Chappelle in a famous Pepsi ad.