idea
We have lots of good ideas and we can not seem to focus on one. We need a way to select one of these ideas and focus on it completely.
How can we select? And what can we do to not lose our focus?
You need to learn to manage a bit better.
There are only so many key points to have in mind when managing a team (or your own time):
And well, yeah, there’s a slew more for control et al, and team-building stuff, and the like. But from a getting things done perspective the above is what you should have in mind.
It is natural to have a lot of seemingly good ideas if you understand market well. But you don’t have resources to commit to all of those ideas, right? It could be hard to focus on one, because you fear missing out on all the others; committing to one will take a lot of energy and time, you will have to let others go. Now the problem is which one of your ideas you should commit to? All seems good, some better than others.
I would say go with the one which satisfies two criteria:
You will be married to your idea for at least a few years to come, it is hard to keep yourself motivated to do your absolute best over a period of time if your motivations are purely financial.
It’s very difficult to actually apply these two principals and come up with a winner. Why? Because you don’t know all the facts. Thing is, you will never know all the facts. None of us humans have. It’s impossible to actually know which of the ideas will yield best results, and it actually doesn’t even matter. Just apply a heuristic, and do as best you can in terms of being truthful to yourself and your partners. Make a decision and forget about it. It doesn’t matter.
Now how to remain focused?
It’s hard to ignore a potential opportunity, where you can introduce efficiency, beauty, fulfil someone’s need while making money for yourself. But thinking about some idea at the expense of something that you have committed to is idea-infidelity. It may be tempting to direct your focus on this new idea. But as I said, it doesn’t matter which idea you have chosen. If you feel fairly confident about it, it’s not worth losing your progress for an idea which looks slightly better than the one you are committed to. Even if it seems a lot better, its not worth it.
My 2 cents.
How about aplying this kind of test. A bit of ‘back of the envelope’ calculation is a way to get from a myriad of ideas to a shortlist 1) Do I like the idea 2) Do I believe in the idea 3) How long will it take 4) Do we have the skills 5) How much will it cost 6) How much will it make 7) Is that a profit 8) Do i still beleive in it
If it passes that test spend a couple of hours writing a short investment appraisal. Start a spreadsheet with and expenses and revenues down the side and weeks across the top. (blatantly ignoring time value of money) Over the next three years are you going to make your money back ie. does it all ad up to a positive number? Does it look promising with some guestimates? Spend a couple of days refining the numbers down then. If it still looks ok start writing a business plan, write a sketch of the code or draw out some graphics…then revisit the plan
Doing something like this means you don’t invest too much time or money before you have had a good play with the idea and see if ou still believe in it. Keep developing and keep improving the plan. Private equity doesn’t invest in ideas, it invests in ideas that have been thought through, and developed at least to the stage where you can demo it.
I’ve also found that it is really hard to compare 50+ ideas, especially if they are in different problem domains. I’ve boiled it down to three questions:
These are free-form questions, which you can answer in great length, and also in just a few words. I’ve outlined the reasons behind them in this article: Evaluate startup ideas - over coffee
My advice for evaluating 50+ ideas:
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