Contrary to the startup myth of a sudden breakthrough, successful Harvard Business School founders engaged in a deliberate ideation process over weeks or months. They systematically evaluated, vetted, and shaped multiple ideas before committing, proving that great ideas are built, not found.
Kasser Yunus of Applied Intuition had a non-negotiable checklist for his startup idea (e.g., software margins, not easily commoditized). He patiently evaluated ideas for over a year, refusing to pursue any that didn't meet all his conditions.
Great ideas aren't planned; they emerge. Start with a small, tangible problem and begin building hands-on. This process allows the idea to gather momentum and mass, like a snowball rolling downhill. The final form will be bigger and different than you could have planned from the start.
The value of an idea database isn't just finding a unicorn startup idea. It's having a constant supply of concepts to practice the entire development lifecycle, from ideation to MVP. This regular practice hones your execution skills, even if the projects aren't commercial hits.
Spontaneous innovation isn't a skill in itself; it's the result of being an expert in contemplation. The ability to quickly process, reflect, and find a new paradigm under pressure comes from a practiced ability to contemplate, not from structured innovation exercises.
Spend significant time debating and mapping out a project's feasibility with a trusted group before starting to build. This internal stress-test is crucial for de-risking massive undertakings by ensuring there's a clear, plausible path to the end goal.
In school or corporate jobs, the 'rules for success' are provided. Founders enter a world with no such rubric and often fail because they don't consciously develop their own theory of how the world works, instead defaulting to shallow, unexamined beliefs about what founders 'should' do.
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.
Aspiring founders often stall while waiting for a perfect idea. The most effective strategy is to simply pick a decent idea and build it. Each project, even a 'losing' one, provides crucial learnings that bring you closer to your eventual successful venture.
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.
Rapid startup success stories are misleading. A company's quick victory is almost always the result of its founder's decade-long journey of grinding, learning, and failing. The compounding effect of skills, credibility, and network building is the true engine behind the breakthrough moment.