I love to collect entrepreneurial myths that those of us who work in the world of new ventures have observed over the years. On of my former students (Chip Hayner) passed along this list of myths from the world of technology start-ups from Rondom Ramblings. It is both humorous and very much on target for many would-be entrepreneurs in any industry.
Here is a sample:
Myth #4: What you think matters.
Reality: It matters not one whit that you and all your buddies think that your idea is the greatest thing since sliced pizza (unless, of course, your buddies are rich enough to be the customer base for your business). What matters is what your customers think. It is natural to assume that if you and your buddies think your idea is cool that millions of other people out there will think it’s cool too, and sometimes it works out that way, but usually not. The reason is that if you are smart enough to have a brilliant idea then you (and most likely your buddies) are different from everyone else. I don’t mean to sound condescending here, but the sad fact of the matter is that compared to you, most people are pretty dumb (look at how many people vote Republican 😉 and they care about dumb things. (I just heard about a new clothing store in Pasadena that has lines around the block. A clothing store!) If you cater only to people who care about the things that you care about then your customer base will be pretty small.
Rondom Ramblings is a great blog and being a rookie entrepreneur, I plan to revisit his site from time to time.
One of his points, that someone will rather work with you than take your idea, I hope is true. I’m developing a unique website called ideatango.com where users will be able to post, request, and exchange ideas for inventions, businesses, approved patents, and other types of intellectual property. One of the issues that potential users have is “will my idea be stolen.” Rondom alleviates both my fear and that of my users by stating that the other person would rather work together (if he/she is smart) than outright take the idea.
Bryan
http://www.ideatango.com
http://www.bryandaigle.com The Daigle blog on a newbie entrepreneur.