Like what YC partners do at https://www.ycombinator.com/rfs but for the community. What's your personal request for startups, or solutions you'd like to see and you'd pay for?
Comments
jschveibinz•1h ago
This is a very common question here and most will scroll right by, so don't feel bad. It's an impossible question to answer, really.
But these are the things you need to consider first when choosing an area to work in for developing a product and ultimately a business:
1. What do you know really well? These are things that come from your personal experiences. Note: this is generally not about software or coding skills--it's about everything else in the world.
2. What are the problems or valuable opportunities in the areas you know well? Where there are serious problems, there are opportunities for valuable solutions.
3. Timing. What's happening in the world and how do the changes open doors for new solutions?
4. Market and Value. How many people suffer with the problems you are trying to solve? How well do you understand them? How much money will they spend for a solution? How many of these people have you spoken with: 25, 50, 100?
5. Who is competing in your market? What can you learn from them? How does your solution compare?
It's best to consider several problems and conceptual solutions before settling on one. Talk with people, build small prototypes, figure out if you truly understand the requirements.
If you do all of these things, you will have a much better shot at bringing forward a viable product and business idea.
There are some really good books out there on this whole process. Good luck.
jschveibinz•1h ago
But these are the things you need to consider first when choosing an area to work in for developing a product and ultimately a business:
1. What do you know really well? These are things that come from your personal experiences. Note: this is generally not about software or coding skills--it's about everything else in the world.
2. What are the problems or valuable opportunities in the areas you know well? Where there are serious problems, there are opportunities for valuable solutions.
3. Timing. What's happening in the world and how do the changes open doors for new solutions?
4. Market and Value. How many people suffer with the problems you are trying to solve? How well do you understand them? How much money will they spend for a solution? How many of these people have you spoken with: 25, 50, 100?
5. Who is competing in your market? What can you learn from them? How does your solution compare?
It's best to consider several problems and conceptual solutions before settling on one. Talk with people, build small prototypes, figure out if you truly understand the requirements.
If you do all of these things, you will have a much better shot at bringing forward a viable product and business idea.
There are some really good books out there on this whole process. Good luck.
dontoni•1h ago