Ideas are cheap and plentiful. Good ideas are precious and rare.
The problem is that you don’t know whether an idea is good if you don’t try to execute on it. The way you show that an idea is good is to actually execute on it.
The problem is that you don’t know whether an idea is good if you don’t try to execute on it.
I don’t think it’s true. Take the reverse case: can you tell that an idea is bad without executing it? Yes, most of the times you can. Obviously, there is uncertainty, but usually you can get a decent estimate of the “quality” of an idea before you start to act on it. There are, of course, nuances and exceptions.
The problem is that you don’t know whether an idea is good if you don’t try to execute on it. The way you show that an idea is good is to actually execute on it.
I don’t think it’s true. Take the reverse case: can you tell that an idea is bad without executing it? Yes, most of the times you can. Obviously, there is uncertainty, but usually you can get a decent estimate of the “quality” of an idea before you start to act on it. There are, of course, nuances and exceptions.
I agree that there are idea for which there are obvious reasons that the idea is bad but most of the time there isn’t that certainty.
Many successful companies such as AirBnB or PInterest had a hard time raising money because investors thought those were bad ideas.
On element of a good startup idea is that there’s little direct competition. If the idea is obvious there’s usually competition.