Find out who else is working on this problem / what other solutions are on the way

Compile a list of vulnerable/weak companies/products

Look for companies that aren't being run by the founder or a similarly-powerful leader

Explanation

Examples

Nature

Politics

Look for companies that are charging for a product that could be monetized without charging those users

Examples

Compile a list of things that you are more knowledgeable about than others

What are you better at than other people?

This is mentioned by Felix Dennis when he says the three elements of searching for what kind of company to start are inclination, aptitude, and fate.

Look at the past projects / problems you've worked on, and see if you can combine the experience you've gained from working on those into a single solution.
-- Example: Woz and his smaller electronics projects giving him the expertise to work on the Apple computer (could you find 10 different people who've solved each sub-problem?)
-- Example: Jonatan Soderstrom and his short game experiments teaching him a bunch of techniques that he was able to put into Hotline Miami

Playboy interview with Gates: He first gives an insightful-sounding rationale for sticking to software. But then (and this is what I found very interesting) he admits that he just stuck with what he knew: software. He didn't know hardware, so he didn't try to get into hardware.

Compile a list of projects for which you can take risks that established companies/governments can't

Compile a list of powerful new technologies

Deep learning

Misc ideas to file

Ways companies get valuable

Lots of users
Lots of revenue


How to identify a good idea


During the RJR Nabisco, Inc. hostile takeover fight in 1987, Buffett was quoted as telling John Gutfreund:[161]
I'll tell you why I like the cigarette business. It costs a penny to make. Sell it for a dollar. It's addictive. And there's fantastic brand loyalty.
—Buffett, quoted in Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco
Speaking at Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s 1994 annual meeting, Buffett said investments in tobacco are:[162]
fraught with questions that relate to societal attitudes and those of the present administration. I would not like to have a significant percentage of my net worth invested in tobacco businesses. The economy of the business may be fine, but that doesn't mean it has a bright future.
—Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting



Make sure the new solution to this problem could be a lot ("10x") better than existing solutions

2012.09.21 - Justin Kan (founder of Justin.tv) - The Divine Inspiration Fallacy

Exactly how much better does the product need to be?

There's a telling lack of specificity when people talk about this. They just say "10x".


I want to have a math formula for it.

It needs to be better enough that:

  1. People will be willing to pay the switching cost.
  2. They will switch quickly enough that you'll be able to take the market.

Make sure you're building on a platform that is growing or remaining stable

Examples of companies building on healthy platforms:

Examples of companies building on dead / empty platforms:

Make sure people will want to use the product

Remember that people buy what they want, which is not necessarily what you think they need.

How can you determine / predict whether people will want to use a product?

Create a product you will use yourself

2014.10.17 - Ev Williams @ Medium - Hatching Inside Medium

Since the first days of Medium, we’ve had an internal version of the site at a different domain, accessible only within our internal company network. For inexplicable reasons, it was first at slowth.com. At this time, it was used more for testing/staging purposes than actual publishing. In fact, the database was dumped on more than one occasion.

It then moved to cupstep.com, and it evolved into our main platform for internal documentation and idea sharing. I couldn’t stand the name “Cupstep,” even as an internal brand, so I set out to find another name and domain to move it to. I settled on hatch.dm, because it was where we hatched new features, as well as new ideas.

Make sure that this solution can be adopted very quickly

2015.09.10 - Medium - Product Hunt - Ben Horowitz’s Best Startup Advice

Question: What are the 20% of techniques, mindsets, skills, etc. new/first-time entrepreneurs have that result in 80% (or a large part) of their success? - Troy Shu

Horowitz: The big thing to focus all of your energy on is product/market fit. Get to a product that people are adopting very quickly, or that you can reliably sell repeatedly. To some extent, everything else — culture, management, etc — is secondary. Don’t take your eyes off the prize.

What exactly are people referring to when they say to make sure that the "timing is right"?

Make sure an incumbent won't be able to destroy you

Barriers to Competition

Jobs: [...] Once IBM gains control of a market sector, they almost always stop innovation. They prevent innovation from happening.

Playboy: Why?

Jobs: Look at this example: Frito-Lay is a very interesting company. They call on more than half a million accounts a week. There’s a Frito-Lay rack in each store, and the chips are all there, and every store’s got the identical rack and the big ones have multiples. For Frito-Lay, the biggest problem is stale product— bad chips, so to speak. For Frito-Lay’s service, they’ve got, like, 10,000 guys who run around and take out the stale product and replace it with good product. They talk to the manager of that department and they make sure everything’s fine. Because of that service and support, they now have more than an 80 percent share of every segment of chips that they’re in. Nobody else can break into that. As long as they keep doing what they do well, nobody else can get 80 percent of the market share, because they can’t get the sales and support staff. They can’t get it because they can’t afford it. They can’t afford it because they don’t have 80 percent of the market share. It’s catch-22. Nobody will ever be able to break into their franchise. Frito-Lay doesn’t have to innovate very much. They just watch all the little chip companies come out with something new, study it for a year, and a year or two years later they come out with their own, service and support it to death, and they’ve got 80 percent of the market share of the new product a year later. IBM is playing exactly the same game. If you look at the mainframe market place, there’s been virtually zero innovation since IBM got dominant control of that market place 15 years ago. They are going to do the same thing in every other sector of the computer market place if they can get away with it. The IBM PC fundamentally brought no new technology to the industry at all. It was just repackaging and slight extension of Apple II technology, and they want it all. They absolutely want it all.

Bezos, Jeff; Playboy; Ted Turner, Steve Jobs, Lee Iacocca, Bill Gates, David Geffen Malcolm Forbes (2012-11-23). The Playboy Interview: Moguls (Kindle Locations 2124-2138). . Kindle Edition.


Nathan: So the trick is to find some problem to solve where you'll be protected against this kind of behavior.

Build something that optimizes a metric your potential competitors are not measuring or are optimizing the opposite of