An idea is only "good" for a specific founder if it aligns with their unique background, skills, and passions. What seems like a terrible idea to one person can be a perfect fit for another, because their life experiences give them a unique insight and unfair advantage in executing it.
For hardworking and talented individuals, the single most important variable for success is the project they choose. Working on a weak market opportunity or a poor founder-fit project can waste years of effort, regardless of skill.
Don't start a company in a space you're indifferent to and ignorant of. Your founding idea must be anchored in either deep domain expertise ("what you know") or a genuine, intense passion for the problem ("what you care about"). Lacking both is playing on "extra hard mode."
Founders with deep market fit must trust their unique intuition over persuasive, but generic, VC advice. Following the standard playbook leads to cookie-cutter companies, while leaning into the 'weird' things that make your business different is what creates a unique, defensible moat.
Instead of chasing trends or pivoting every few weeks, founders should focus on a singular mission that stems from their unique expertise and conviction. This approach builds durable, meaningful companies rather than simply chasing valuations.
Success stories like Notion's cannot be replicated because they are a direct result of their founder's unique personality and 'narrative violations.' Great companies succeed based on the specific, unrepeatable idiosyncrasies of their founders. The key is to embrace these unique traits, not follow a generic playbook.
In a crowded market, the most critical question for a founder is not "what's the idea?" but "why am I so lucky to have this insight?" You must identify your unique advantage—your "alpha"—that allows you to see something others don't. Without this, you're just another smart person trying things.
Instead of searching for a market to serve, founders should solve a problem they personally experience. This "bottom-up" approach guarantees product-market fit for at least one person—the founder—providing a solid foundation to build upon and avoiding the common failure of abstract, top-down market analysis.
The most potent business ideas are discovered, not forced. They arise naturally from being an active participant in a niche community and experiencing its problems firsthand. Instead of searching for 'an idea,' immerse yourself in a passion; the right opportunity will present itself.
To identify non-consensus ideas, analyze the founder's motivation. A founder with a deep, personal reason for starting their company is more likely on a unique path. Conversely, founders who "whiteboarded" their way to an idea are often chasing mimetic, competitive trends.
The most enduring companies, like Facebook and Google, began with founders solving a problem they personally experienced. Trying to logically deduce a mission from market reports lacks the authenticity and passion required to build something great. The best ideas are organic, not analytical.