How to Get and Evaluate Startup Ideas | Startup School
Finding a promising idea (0s)
- Emphasizes the importance of starting with a promising idea for a startup’s success
- The talk provides conceptual tools to evaluate startup ideas similar to the approach taken by Y Combinator (YC)
- Acknowledges that while no one can predict with certainty which ideas will succeed, better initial ideas have higher chances
Where does this advice come from? (51s)
- The advice is based on analysis of the top 100 YC companies by valuation and their idea origins
- It is also influenced by an essay by Paul Graham, experiences with pivoting YC companies, and reading applications of rejected YC startups
- Aims to help founders avoid common mistakes and provides insights into recognizing good ideas and the process of generating them
4 most common mistakes (1m44s)
- Building something that doesn’t solve a real problem for users is a top mistake, akin to a solution in search of a problem (CISP)
- Falling in love with a problem is recommended, rather than being fascinated by a technology looking for an application
- Avoid overly abstract societal issues and focus on specific, tractable problems instead
- 'Tar pit' ideas are common startup ideas that seem plausible but have structural reasons for failure, and thus they trap founders
- Founders often fall for tar pit ideas because they encounter the problem frequently and believe the solution appears simple
- Advises researching past attempts, understanding the structural challenges, and not insisting on pursuing "the perfect startup idea"
- Suggests aiming for a "good starting point" as ideas will likely evolve and there is no perfect initial concept
10 key questions to ask about any startup idea (6m29s)
- Determine if you have founder-market fit; assess if your team is suited for the idea, like PlanGrid founders.
- Gauge the market size and potential; consider rapidly growing small markets, similar to Coinbase in 2012.
- Evaluate the problem's severity; a good problem has no existing solutions, like startups needing credit cards before Brex.
- Analyze the competition; positive competition suggests a valid market, but a new insight is often needed.
- Confirm personal desire and knowledge of others needing the solution; avoid ventures no one wants.
- Identify recent changes in the world; consider new technologies or regulatory changes, such as Checker's background check API.
- Utilize proxies; large companies in related fields, like Rappi with Doordash as a proxy in Latin America.
- Consider your willingness to commit to the idea long-term; passion may develop as the business grows successful.
- Question business scalability; Software scales easily, but services or labor-intensive models may not.
- Choose a good idea space; an adaptable field can lead to successful pivots if the initial idea fails, similar to 5tran's journey.
3 things that make your startup idea good (14m40s)
- Difficult startup ideas can deter others, leaving opportunities like Stripe did with credit card integration.
- Ideas in unglamorous, boring spaces, such as Gusto's payroll software, may have a high hit rate due to lack of competition.
- Existing competitors may indicate a valid market that hasn't been fully served, as Dropbox showed by improving UI for cloud storage.
How to come up with startup ideas (19m42s)
- Good startup ideas are often found organically, with 70% of YC top companies doing so.
- To generate good startup ideas, become an expert in a valuable field, work at a startup, or build interesting projects even if not intended as businesses, such as how Replicon began.