@den_pointย โขย 15h
A framework for finding ideas for a startup It's very simplistic, but it clearly categorizes the approaches The logic is simple: if you haven't encountered a problem and you're not familiar with it, it's very difficult to make a good product. Without a good product, it's super hard to beat the market Three basic approaches to finding an idea: 1/ Walking away from the problem is the best way The problems you face at work are much more familiar than the problems you encounter as a consumer. Especially where I've just heard about it 2/ Moving away from technology is a bad way You're trying to apply technology in a vacuum, without having to deal with the details of where current solutions are failing or failing to satisfy customers 3/ Making a clone of an existing one is not a bad way If something is already working, most of the problems have been solved. You can take what works and adapt it: the OSS version, a new niche, geography, pricing, or a new use case
Building WelBe| Entr...ย โขย 9m
Paul Graham (Co-founder, Y Combinator) "The way to get startup ideas is not to try to think of startup ideas. It's to look for problems, preferably problems you have yourself." The best startup ideas come from solving real problems, not just brain
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