Wil Schroter
If you had the idea for Facebook before Mark Zuckerberg, you could have been worth $40 billion like good ol' Mark, right?.
Except, you couldn't. Because the idea alone isn't worth jack.
Not so sure? Ask Jonathan Abrams the incredibly talented Founder who created Friendster in 2002, around the time good ol' Zuck was graduating high school. Friendster was absolutely Facebook before Facebook, as was Hi5 and MySpace.
But unless you're a band from the mid-2000s, you're probably not maintaining a profile anywhere but "the Facebook."
Oh, and technically the idea wasn't Mark's either, but that's a whole other movie.
Think of the idea like a seed.
The seed alone has the potential to be something great, but by itself, it's just a seed. The idea alone can't compete in the marketplace. It requires a ton of resources and execution for it to grow into a beautiful flower — and more often than not, very few people are capable of nurturing it properly (see MySpace, hi5, Friendster).
Not the way people think they are.
Often the idea is what gets the startup formed and moving, but the difference between the initial concept and what often becomes the behemoth that we know today is vastly different.
So the idea as a standalone has very little to do with the company that it will one day become. It's just a spark, not a "this will absolutely happen" blueprint.
That's actually true in some cases.
Sometimes there will be some defensible intellectual property that is contributed as part of the formation of a company. If the idea comes in the form of something defensible, such as a patent, or some kind of unique discovery — like a proprietary algorithm — then it's treated more like an asset than a concept.
It is — the moment you decide to become the person who takes it to market and beats all your competitors.
How to find your billion-dollar idea. Alex Kistenev — Co-Founder of Standuply — shares his own personal set of techniques to coming up with better ideas for a startup.
What’s my seed-stage startup worth? How can anybody possibly place a value on something that really doesn’t exist yet, while recognizing you eventually have to put a value on it? Mike Belsito — author of Startup Seed Funding for the Rest of Us — explains.
Came up with a great startup idea? What next? Neeraj Joshi, Head of Product at Spinny — India’s largest dedicated portal for pre-owned cars — outlines 6 key steps to validate your business idea.
This is just a small sample! Register to unlock our in-depth courses, hundreds of video courses, and a library of playbooks and articles to grow your startup fast. Let us Let us show you!
Submission confirms agreement to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
Already a member? Login
No comments yet.
Already a member? Login