If investors are not convinced (and you are not independently wealthy, in which case you should be less risk adverse), you will not be able to devote your full time efforts to a long term project, no matter how worthwhile you think it is.
True, but there are gray areas in the middle ground: spend evenings and weekends on your research project, find part time employment that gives you a bit more spare time, do the research as a graduate student, live on the dole and eat noodles, ask family for support, take out a second mortgage on your house to pay the bills in the meantime, spend a year in Australia working as a bartender to save up enough money to cover a year of research, etc.
Of course none of these is ideal, and none is a permanent solution, but then, venture capitalists (let alone banks) usually won’t finance research—they’re looking for faster and surer payback, and even trying to do development as a startup is hard enough—so as a practical matter, most people with a research project they want to pursue end up having to try one or more of the gray area solutions at least for a while (unless you already have an established position in academia or a corporate think tank, and obtaining such a position is a hard and uncertain task with costs of its own).
So the truth is, unless you are particularly lucky, you’re going to be paying a substantial personal cost one way or another, which doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it, but it does mean is this worth the cost even considering that I might fail? is a highly relevant question.
But what if it’s something you think is worth trying, yet investors are not convinced of this?
If investors are not convinced (and you are not independently wealthy, in which case you should be less risk adverse), you will not be able to devote your full time efforts to a long term project, no matter how worthwhile you think it is.
True, but there are gray areas in the middle ground: spend evenings and weekends on your research project, find part time employment that gives you a bit more spare time, do the research as a graduate student, live on the dole and eat noodles, ask family for support, take out a second mortgage on your house to pay the bills in the meantime, spend a year in Australia working as a bartender to save up enough money to cover a year of research, etc.
Of course none of these is ideal, and none is a permanent solution, but then, venture capitalists (let alone banks) usually won’t finance research—they’re looking for faster and surer payback, and even trying to do development as a startup is hard enough—so as a practical matter, most people with a research project they want to pursue end up having to try one or more of the gray area solutions at least for a while (unless you already have an established position in academia or a corporate think tank, and obtaining such a position is a hard and uncertain task with costs of its own).
So the truth is, unless you are particularly lucky, you’re going to be paying a substantial personal cost one way or another, which doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it, but it does mean is this worth the cost even considering that I might fail? is a highly relevant question.