Sunday, May 24, 2020

How to get good ideas for startups

How to get good ideas for startups The majority of people in the US would like to be self-employed, according to Dartmouth economist, David Blanchflower. This makes sense because people who work for themselves are happier than people who work at someone elses company, according to research from Estaban Calvo at the Harvard School of Public Health. However the majority are not self-employed, and one of the most important reasons for this is that people do not know how to come up with an idea for a business. 1. Read all the time, among broad sources and materials. In a study spanning sixty years of economically underprivileged Harvard graduates, psychiatrist George Valliant concluded (in a great article in the Atlantic) that the only consistent indicator of who will be happy later in life is who did chores as a child. This information should make almost everyone happy, since obviously just graduating from Harvard isnt enough to guarantee happiness. It also gave me a burst of hope for our new life on the farm. The type of farm we live on has big cash flow and little incomes. Im not sure if this qualifies us for the Harvard study demographic, but just in case, my kids do a lot of chores. They take care of farm animals and get rewarded with computer time. Not quite American Gothic. But still, maybe a path to happiness. 2. Ask a lot of questions about a lot of businesses. You know youre an entrepreneur if you cant stop thinking of business ideas. I started thinking of farm business ideas from the day I discovered the farm. I asked about margins on pigs, cost of goods for eggs, cash flow during a bad harvest. At first the farmer was jarred by my distinctly non-girlfriend date-chat. But once he realized I was thinking of business ideas, he said to me: I will never go into business with you. Ever. You would be a pain, and Im already doing enough with you now. Thats when we were only seeing each other once a week so you can imagine how much he doesnt want to go into business with me now that Im living with him. Still, I run all my ideas by him, which is another sign of a good entrepreneur. You cant tell if you have a good idea until you tell people. Let others poke holes in your ideas. All ideas have holes in them. The trick with starting a business is telling enough people the idea so you have gain enough knowledge about the holes in the idea so you can see if these are the types of holes you want to figure out how to plug. 3. Identify an emotional need in the marketplace. So I tell the farmer that Im thinking of starting a business for kids to learn how to farm. Chores for the summer, happiness for a lifetime! Thats my pitch. I tell him it leverages my marketing strengths because I will play to the parents being sick of parenting: They know they should make their kids do chores, but they dont want to fight about it. I take the fight out of chores. The farmer says that while marketing is my strength, spending day after day with twenty kids (the number Id need for profitability) is probably not a strength. 4. No idea is precious. If its bad, just move to the next one. So I keep thinking. Then I meet a guy who wants to invest in a company where I sell cheese online. There are lots of small-town cheese makers who dont market nationally. Im thinking about that. The farmer likes that idea more than the chores one because he doesnt know about cheese so I dont bug him about it. He also likes the cheese model because he sees how Brazen Careerist takes investor money and spends it without making the money back. Well exit on traffic, I tell him. And he gets scared that hes living with a member of a financial cult. Another idea I had is to buy a herd of Waygu cattle. The farmer laughs when I tell him, and he says. Youre going to be a rancher? No, I say. Its marketing. I think theres a consumer market for Kobi beef thats not being addressed. And an investor will buy a herd for me to get started. But you know sales and marketing. You dont know cattle. How will you run the company? I say, I have a core competency in hooking up with good cattle farmers. 5. Surround yourself with curious, engaged people Then the investor sends me an article about Chianina cattle and writes that maybe we should buy these instead. I send the article to the farmer for a second opinion. Saras Sarasvathy, professor at Darden School of Business, once told me that the key to being a good entrepreneur is not a certain skill set, but the ability to get people to fill in where your skills are weak. Which gives me the temerity to bug the farmer: Did you read the article? Oh. Yeah. Did you see the pictures? Look at the Angus. The best cuts of meat are at the back, and the Angus has much more meat on them than the Chianina. I look. 6. Mix and match ideas two old ideas together equal a new idea. I say, But the Chianina has more meat in the front. The brisket part. All the cheap meat the Jews eat from years of living in shtetle poverty is bountiful on the Chianina. The Chianina is the cow for the Jews! No, its not like that, he says. You need fat and marbling to make good meat and the Angus brisket has that. Look, I say, If I show these pictures on my website and say I have the best brisket, it makes intuitive sense. The farmer shakes his head and laughs. Then he says this type of cattle is very tall and really hard to manage. They jump fences and crash into short, unsuspecting bystanders. The farmer has bred his herd of Angus cattle to be very calm and easy-going. He says thats important so he can handle them well. When he says this it always scares me: I hope hes bored with calm breeding and thats why he picked me. 7. Stay on the right side of honest, but recognize that theres big money on the very edge. The farmer says that in cattle shows (or whatever theyre called I forget), the farmers often drug their Chianina so they dont get too wild in the ring. How can people tell? I ask. They cant really. But sometimes one is drugged too much and he lies down in the ring. Is that bad? Yes. Of course its bad. People dont want drugs in their meat. Wait. I have an idea. You could do custom meat. Like, if someone wants Xanax, you give the Chianina Xanax. Or Valium. We could take special orders. Then we have a calm herd with premium brisket and a market niche that caters to the Jewish fascination with psychiatry. The farmer says nothing. He is fascinated by the Jewish penchant to do commentary on the Jews. That was what he noticed most at his first Jewish Holiday, Rosh Hashanah. The Jews at the table make Jewish jokes and talk about the politics of Israel like American talk about the politics of abortion: Everyone disagrees with everyone. Its the disagreement that fascinates me, though. Paul Graham, founder of the venture firm, Y Combinator, says there are no amazing ideas, there is only amazing commitment to exploring ideas. I agree. So I dont care if my business ideas are good or not, because entrepreneurship is taking joy in the process of the banter of ideas until you land on a business model. And I think the farmer likes that, too. I was throwing out some Percocet and he smiled and said, Hey, wait. Maybe we should give that to the chickens.

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