“If only I had a good idea for a business… then I’d be rich!”
Just a few weeks ago, I wrote about why 99% of entrepreneurs fail. But before you have the potential to be a failed entrepreneur, you need an idea. And many aspiring entrepreneurs don’t know where to start.
Why are good ideas so hard to come by? Because most people try to think of them in either the wrong venue, or from the wrong-perspective. You need to stop thinking of yourself as an entrepreneur when you’re thinking of an idea. You need to experience life as the world’s victim, experiencing the flaws of the human life, and figuring out ways to improve on it.
How can I be the person with billions of great business ideas?
1) You’re born with the ability to see the world in an abstract way, and can immediately come up with ideas on how to rid the world of its problems. You look at the world around you, and ideas are popping out as fast as babies from teenage girls. In other words, you’re lucky.
2) And then there’s everyone else who can’t think of any good ideas. For the other 99% of the entrepreneurs in the world, including me, you struggle in the pursuit for ideas. You either need to retrain to be an idea person, or steal an idea from someone else. Or do both. So how did I do it? How did I go from having no ideas for a business/nonprofit to having more ideas than I could possibly work on? I followed the following “idea life-cycle”:

It isn’t simple, but I’m going to suggest that you change your perspective on the world in one select way: It’s as retarded as it gets, but be a picky bitch who can identify everything wrong in the world, and not be scared to share it with others. Everyday, you experience minor inconveniences in your life that are waiting to get solved. But after learning to become “mature adults,” you’ve conditioned yourself to be happy with what you have, leaving the flaws in life untouched.
If you want to expose yourself to more ideas, you need to train yourself, and in every obscure way possible. Don’t settle for anything that you’re not content with. Experience the world for what it is, and be absolutely freaking honest with your feelings and frustrations in life, and come up with ways to fix them. Let’s take one “simple” exercise that I remember doing in elementary school, and analyze it. Here was the thought process of my 6 year old mind:
I’d go to a restaurant with my Daddy. The wait is 15 minutes long and I hate waiting. Why can’t I order my food NOW, and have it ready for me when a table is ready? Why do I have to wait on a line before I can even order? Why is it annoying to flip each page in the menu? What have my friends tried and liked? Why do waiters take so long to come take my order when I know what I want to order? Why is the portion so massive… couldn’t they give me something I could finish? Why does it take so long to pay? … And Daddy, why are you staring at the waitress?
I could go on and on with this story for pages, describing everything sucky about the way restaurants work. As you could probably assume, I was a very picky, impatient (and curious) child. I’d often share these thoughts with my parents, and they’d tell me to shut up and be appreciative with what I have. Fortunate for them, I’ve since become a jolly human being.
But unfortunately, I’ve lost this incredible ability! Think about the possibilities — If you and I were able to experience the world like 6 year old Jessica Mah, then we’d have hundreds of potential business ideas each day. Sure, you’d probably be a life hater and that lonely kid on the playground who didn’t have any friends. (which I was) – but at least you’d have lots of ideas, and perhaps even one fantastic idea for a company you could start.
Train yourself to be a child who sees more bad than good in the world.
If you fit into the second category of entrepreneurs that I listed above, (not being born an idea-person) then it’s imperative that you train yourself to be the snobby 6 year old girl who has no problem complaining about the flaws in this world, then asking her daddy to fix them. For every flaw you see in this world, write it down in a journal. Be as general as possible. For example, based on my thought-process in a restaurant, I’d be able to come up with these ideas:
- Waiting on lines sucks
- Waiting for servers sucks
- Having people not know your preferences sucks
- Comparing dozens of options with each other sucks
- Life in general sucks
Now bring those general ideas back home with you, and get out of your 6 year old la-la land. Start thinking of ways the world sucks in all of those above ways, and ways to fix them. I hated waiting to get seated at a restaurant, so how can I improve that? Since the problem was so general, (”waiting on lines sucks”) how could I apply this to waiting for anything in life? This simple example applies to waiting at theme parks, airports, traffic, waiting on new mail, and I’m sure dozens of other things that are totally not worth waiting on.
And for each of those ideas, we can break it down further into dozens of potential solutions. The airport example is being fixed in a lot of great ways that you can see: Online check-in and the Clear Pass, just to name a few. Commercial flight has been around for decades, yet nobody has thought of the above ideas until just a few years ago. This suggests that fantastic ideas are all around you, just waiting to get found.
So to recap on the lifecycle of finding ideas
As they say, the best ideas come from entrepreneurs who are fixing a problem that they saw in the world; not from any profit incentive or selfish motive. And there’s no better way to do this than to see as many flaws in the world possible. Think of as many ways that life sucks. Every context you’re in provides new opportunity to think of ways to improve on the world. Most of the ideas you come up with will suck, but many will hold great opportunity if you don’t dismiss them so fast.
Then, apply these flaws to everything else in life. I’m serious — keep a journal with all of the flaws in the world. Then in the bathtub, start brainstorming creative solutions to those problems. When you have a list of problems to solve, you have a framework from which you can think of brilliant business ideas.
With that said, go experience the world starting now, and be honest with your true feelings on why your life sucks. (even if it doesn’t.) Then, transfer those ideas into entrepreneurial concepts. As a good idea-person, you’re capable of finding every minuscule flaw in human life. Just try not to bring this to the business… and especially not to the bedroom.
February 26th, 2009 at 3:23 pm
[...] Jessica Mah: If I only had a good idea for a business… Then I’d be rich! [...]
February 26th, 2009 at 4:01 pm
That’s a great approach to grabbing new ideas! It seems that lots of problems are solved when a great idea is borrowed and added to, or altered. Take for example the PC. The personal computer brought computer use to the household, whereas before regular people wouldn’t care about or have any interest in computers.
I’m going to start writing every single idea I get in a notebook
from now on.
Thanks for the inspiration.
Clinton
February 27th, 2009 at 4:07 am
This truly is “Think Outside the Box” type of way to discover ideas. In other words it is as natural as the existence of the so called “problems” or “flaws” or “issues” that are part of our lives naturally. Adding to Clinton’s post, just like how PCs grew into the household market, the PCs also gave birth to the idea of sharing resources to make organizations more productive by creating computer networks which then lead to the next greatful evolution, the Internet, which we cannot live without today.
Just thinking of what are the current issues that I see around me right now, I already came up with two ideas to improve which we use daily. I will definitely write these down. Thank you for this wonderful post Jess.
Sid
February 27th, 2009 at 3:13 pm
I have a 6 year old daughter. Last week she was asking how to get rich, I told her a lot of people do it by owning their own business. She of course wants her own business now. One of her ideas was a candy business, but she couldn’t decide if she wanted a candy factory or a candy store; her other idea was to build tree houses and sell them for $1 each. I’m excited she is thinking about this stuff already, but hope she doesn’t try to outsource the tree house building to me for a cut of the profits.
Maybe I should keep asking her for more ideas and write them down for her, someday she might like to look back at them.
February 28th, 2009 at 11:44 pm
Hey Jessica,
very interesting article. I like the idea of going through the day and seeing as many flaws as possible (at least while looking for new entrepreneurial ideas).
Thanks for the tip!
Alex from Germany
PS: No need to run yourself down so much. You and your Blog are really great.
March 1st, 2009 at 5:41 am
Close.
I have never met them, but I guess there are people out there who think “I want to be an entrepreneur, now all I need is an idea.”
I want to be a skier. Now if only I were at the top of a hill with skis on…
March 1st, 2009 at 6:53 am
hahaha i could not stop laughing the whole time while reading this post. i tried to count how many times you said the word ’sucks’, but i think i lost count somewhere around the 10th paragraph.
i totally agree with everything you said though. finding ways to make suck things less suck is the approach that i take when trying to come up with new business ideas.
you get an a+ for communicating that a lot better than i can.
March 1st, 2009 at 12:56 pm
… And Daddy, why are you staring at the waitress?…haha
iPhone driven optical illusion glasses….
My daughters a sweet pea, I’m watching her and not staring at the waitress
And the list can go on (and on)
March 2nd, 2009 at 10:48 am
Thanks for another great post! It really does take a mentality to be able to catch yourself when you’re complaining and think “wow! A business that solves that would be great!”
March 4th, 2009 at 3:39 am
What a great surprise, a teenager girl give me a lesson – how to see the world in a brand new perspective. Thank’s Jessica, I will start to follow you girl.
March 7th, 2009 at 7:35 pm
Well put!
March 19th, 2009 at 3:37 pm
I do think that with the rise of ecommerce and internet businesses, a person just need a great idea and determination in order to succeed. The internet has become one of the great equalizers on the internet with a lot of people making their fortunes out from the internet.
April 4th, 2009 at 1:09 pm
Hey Jess,
Alex here
So I keep having very interesting discussions about business and entrepreneurship with my friend Walt (whom you should def.meet.) Our last discussion had very much to do with the topic of this article. I was telling him how if I see/find a problem, it probably means that there are at least a hundred other people with tblhe same problem, and likely thousands, and hundreds of thousands even! Walt then butter in like the skeptic he tends to be and said that it does not mean that the solution can be turned into a profitable business. So, while I agree with you that it’s easy to identify problems in life (because it tends to suck), I think that it’s very difficult to be completely selfless-especially if you are not Evan Williams. I really do think that as humans we are undeniably always looking to improve our cohorts’ existence, but that we are also always looking out for ourselves in the process. For this reason I do not think that having profit motives is fundamentally wrong. In closing, I also think that good *businesses* with an ultimate profit motive and the entrepreneurs who start them are generally going to be creating better solutions. If I am willing to pay for something, after all that generally means my problem was solved well.
May 7th, 2009 at 7:08 am
Thanks for the post! Yeah, it seems like most people (me included of course), have a tendency to unconciously accept the status quo, the implication being that we become blind to many opportunities.
September 21st, 2009 at 10:46 pm
Well done! Go ahead.
January 7th, 2010 at 8:10 pm
[...] few months ago, I wrote an article on how to come up with business ideas. I basically said to look at the world with a critical eye, and to keep track of everything that [...]