Overwhelmed by an "ocean of good ideas" from brilliant scientists, non-technical founder Cyriac Roeding couldn't distinguish a good idea from a truly outstanding one. His breakthrough came from a simple, direct question to his mentor, Dr. Sam Gambhir: "Which one has the highest potential of all of them?"
EARLI's CEO uses a counter-intuitive mental filter for new ventures: he actively tries to forget them. He believes that only the truly compelling, outstanding ideas are the ones that are impossible to forget and keep re-emerging in his mind. This passive persistence test helps separate fleeting interests from foundational concepts.
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."
Don't wait for a 'Shark Tank' invention. Your most valuable business idea is likely a proprietary insight you have about a broken process in your current field. Everyone has a unique vantage point that reveals an inefficiency or an unmet need that can be the seed of a successful venture.
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.
If you don't have an industry or idea, don't start with product brainstorming. Start by identifying groups of people you'd genuinely enjoy serving. The foundation of a sustainable business is a founder's deep connection to their customer, which provides motivation to solve their problems.
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.
Maintain a running list of problems you encounter. If a problem persists and you keep running into it after a year, it's a strong signal for a potential business idea. This "aging" process filters out fleeting frustrations from genuinely persistent, valuable problems.
The Stormy AI founder advocates for prioritizing a founder's internal "hunch" over direct customer feedback for breakthrough ideas. He argues that while customer interviews are good for incremental improvements, building a truly massive company requires a unique, non-obvious secret or vision that data alone cannot provide. This conviction fuels persistence through tough times.
According to Vinod Khosla, the flood of (often bad) advice entrepreneurs receive makes their ability to discern who to trust on which topic their single most important decision, even more critical than execution itself.
Instead of asking for general feedback, Decagon's founder systematized ideation by pressing potential customers on exactly how much they would pay, who approves the budget, and how they would justify ROI. This filters out weak ideas and provides strong commercial signals.