Analyze & Rank your idea(s) from an Investor’s point of view based on the key success factors of the business game!
<aside> 💡 How Can This Help?
If the success or collapse of a new venture is somehow predicted by evaluating the fundamental idea behind it, then the question is: what makes a great idea?
To answer that, we turn to the masters of financial success, investors!
Regardless of your subjective criteria like passion or impact, from a business perspective, it’s important to understand what makes a great “idea”. Investors are heartless and they rarely make a decision to invest in a startup because they have passion for the idea or feel that they can make an impact or any other emotional factor. An investor pure focus is to have a great ROI and that’s mainly a tangible monetary ROI. It’s simply that the difference between the risk they’re taking and the reward they’re going to obtain is huge, that’s when they invest
For every game, there are some common practices, factors or rules to succeed. Similarly, in business, regardless of any idea, there are main basic blocks that we can use to evaluate the opportunity in hand, we call those the “Rules of the game”. These are the same rules that investors evaluate ideas in order to know whether or not to invest in any venture.
Before rushing into building your startup, an entrepreneur needs to think like an investor and assess his idea first according to the “rules of the game”. Those are the set of elements that every business would need in order to succeed. We’re going to rank every idea generated using those elements and choose which one scores higher. This ranking is not subjective, that’s why you won’t see anything like “Passion”, “Vision”, “Interests” or “Skills”.
The investor success factors are simple. It’s all about the art of balancing the RISK & REWARDS of any potential idea. There’s no good or bad idea. There’s a bad and good thing for every idea. When you find the goods overweighting the bad in your ideas while comparing them relatively, that’s when you really evaluate your ideas.
The reward is all about the potential, the reward, or the return your idea will have. To measure that, we’ll look at the below 6 factors
“Focus on helping others and everything else will fall into place”, after all my mom was right!
Entrepreneurship is all about problem-solving and unless you’re solving a problem, satisfying a need or even creating a problem, urge, desire, you won’t be selling a “reason” for your customers to buy. But a reason is not the only thing needed here. It’s the mix between the frequency and the intensity a problem is causing your customer to undergo for them to have a strong reason to buy. The pain resulting from such frequency and intensity problem is what’s called a “monetizable pain”, the type of pain that will get customers to take out their hard-earned money to solve it.
So, you need to ask yourself: Is there a compelling reason to solve this problem or to buy a solution? How frequent and intense the pain this problem/need is resulting?
Economic viability is all about how much money you can make out of this idea, the financial potential. At the end of the day, it’s business that we’re playing and the only fuel for this game is MONEY. Whether you like it or not, you need money to serve your customers, hire employees and make a difference through your startup.
But how to we measure that. Here are the 4 important factors:
So, ask yourself, does it have a compelling exit strategy supported by data? Investors & VC’s are putting money into such ideas? How much money can I make from every customer? Is it subjected to great margins?
In point 1, we determined if there’s a problem and how intense and frequent is the resultant pain. Now the only identifier that will tell us if the customers are in real pain, is only if they’re paying for an alternative. It’s not enough to identity a painful problem. You also want to prove with data whether or not customers are paying for alternatives to solve the problem.
So, ask yourself, are there enough data to prove willingness to pay for such problem? How much are customer currently paying for an alternative?
Your ideas won’t have wings to fly if it doesn’t align with you and your skills. Ask any expert, investor or entrepreneur and they will guarantee you that the behind any successful startup is a great founding team. You need an idea that aligns with your passion, interests and definitely your skills.
This will determine how good your execution can be. Miss this factor and you get a great idea that is not fit for you to execute. We’ll later dig deep into this factor for its importance.
So, ask yourself, does this idea aligns with your passion, values, interests and skills? Do you have the required domain, technical and operational skills to execute it?
A “reason to buy” (aka painful problem”) is not enough if the current solutions are doing just fine trying to solve the problem. Here’s one thing you need to fathom: any painful idea is already been solved in a way or another. The customer undergoing such pain will go in search for solutions or even create his handy own. It’s not about the pool of solutions out there that’s important, it’s how satisfied the customer is with the current solutions, competitors, and alternatives. It’s about finding an “unmet need” or desire that is not yet sufficiently addressed that your customers are so passionately and happy to pay for your solution.
So, you should know whether or not your proposed solution is
So, ask yourself: does my proposed solution is better than the alternatives? And is it scalable enough to help me grow into different segments and markets while decreasing or maintaining a low cost?
Of course, here you need to first ask yourself of possible current alternatives your customer is using to solve his problem. One more thing, I understand that we still haven’t drill into your solution yet. But from the “Idea Card” where you proposed your solution, we just want to know how satisfying your proposed solution is compared to the alternatives. So far you don’t know what product, solution the customer would accept or buy but you have an idea of the problem, customer and what you can offer (what we mean by offer is value). So here we want to know how clear you think the idea adds value. Do you have a product or service in mind? And how much do you think that product or service is adding value?
In the first point, we talked about the “reason to buy” from a micro level. Now we want to ask how big is the marker of people having such “reason to buy”. It’s not enough to find a monetizable pain or problem. You need to find a great demand too.
What defines Demand? Well, two things:
So, you need to ask yourself: how big is the size of my market? And whether or not it’s growing with time?
The risk is all about the expected pitfalls, obstacles, and challenges related to this idea. To measure that, we'll look at the below 4 factors
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