Help – someone stole my idea!
By Rajesh Setty on Tue 22 Aug 2006, 12:55 PM – 10 Comments
I have written about this before and probably will write more before the end of the year. Here is some background:
Being in Silicon Valley, it it not hard for me to meet with different types of people at entrepreneurship related conferences. Most of them fall under the four categories below:
b) entrepreneurs who think they are successful
c) people who want to be entrepreneurs
d) people who think they want to be entrepreneurs
The last category has everything. They are the most interesting, amusing and frustrating people that I encounter.They are smart people and probably are very successful in their current jobs. They have interesting ideas (sometimes) to build busiensses on but unfortunately, they don’t have the heart of an entrepreneur. Here are the kinds of comments they open their introduction with:
b) “In some sense Yahoo! stole my idea”
c) “I had the very same idea last year. I even told this to some of my friends. Microsoft beat me to it”
Honestly, I don’t know how to respond to those kinds of comments. When I learn a bit more about them, it is clear to me that they were not going to do anything with those ideas anyways. In fact, my big worry is that they currently have some ideas cooking in their minds – won’t do a thing with them and three years later repeat the same story with someone else.
Here are my $.02 on this topic
1. You may not be the only person to get that idea
2. Majority of people who get an idea won’t do a thing with it
a) They don’t want to do anything with ideas. They just like to stretch their creativity
b) Most often, executing on an idea requires a “lot more work” than conceiving that idea
c) People move on to the next idea. That is more fun!
3. What you do with the idea is equally important as the idea itself
a) Bad Idea + Bad Execution (Clueless category)
b) Bad Idea + Good Execution (Over-confident category)
c) Good Idea + Bad Execution (Novice Category)
d) Good Idea + Good Execution (Winner category)
Of course, you want to be in the “Winner” quadrant but you may not always start there. More than anything, you should clearly know what category you are currently in.
4. Who you do it with is equally important as what you do with the idea.
More often, I don’t need to get to that second meeting. It is very clear that some teams can’t execute on this or any other idea.
5. You need a healthy appetite for risk
Statistics show that the chances of you succeeding as an entrepreneur are very slim. In fact, if you are very logical and want to be an entrepreneur, I suggest that you don’t look at the statistics at all. They don’t look pretty.
I see too many people trying to play safe. It’s almost like they are saying “I will start working full-time in my new business once I am VERY clear that I can take home a reasonable amount of money every month.” In reality, the scenario may be that you have to work full-time in your business in order to increase your chances of taking home a resonable amount of money every month. There is no guarantee there and that is where your appetite for risk comes in.
In closing, I want to wish all those wannabe entrerpeneurs the very best!
Related Articles:- Pre-stealing ideas
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- Questionable reasons to become an entrepreneur #4 – I have a great idea
- Stop worrying about your idea and start focusing on execution
Posted in the Business Models, Main Page category.
10 Comments so far, Add Yours
Anonymous on August 22nd, 2006
I thought this was a fantastic post! I think anyone who runs a small business or gets comments like these quite frequently. I know I’ve heard them often enough…!
Anonymous on August 23rd, 2006
Good idea + ‘Bad’ execution = Novice
The article has it as Good idea + Good execution = Novice.
Anonymous on August 24th, 2006
Great post. Spectator entrepreneurs help make events like that cheaper, they serve and economic purpose for us.
Anonymous on August 27th, 2006
Dave, Bill, Manoj and Hans:
Thank you for your comments.
I love the term “spectator entrepreneurs” and in one of the emails I got, the term used was “armchair entrepreneurs”
Have a great week ahead!
Best,
Rajesh
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Dave Doolin on November 19th, 2009
By your definition, I’m definitely clueless. The numbers don’t lie.
But I’d rather be pounding through my ignorance poorly executing a bad idea than dreaming about fortune and glory. And not doing anything about it.
Back to the salt mine.
Rajesh Setty on November 19th, 2009
Dave, please take care there. I am sure you are doing quite well.
Thanks for chipping in here.
Best,
Rajesh
9 Reasons Why Many Smart People Go Nowhere | Life Beyond Code on March 31st, 2010
[…] will steal their ideas and they won’t share them. So it’s a double loss there. If they stop worrying about others stealing their idea and start executing, it will be a whole new world out […]
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Anonymous on August 22nd, 2006
Spot on, Rajesh. If I had a nickel for each time I had to explain to an entrepreneur that it’s the *implementation* that’s important, not the idea, and that ideas really are a dime a dozen…