by alexcason on 2/4/16, 11:18 AM with 5 comments
The problem is that the idea isn't really something which I can validate by myself or by asking people that I know. I'd need to go out and find the target audience and ask them.
Is this worth doing or would it be better to focus on an idea which I know is a problem myself or which someone I have a relationship with knows is a problem?
by brudgers on 2/4/16, 4:32 PM
The big problem is it's easier to care about the solution than the problem because coding is fun and other people's problems tend not to be fun. This leads to imagining problems that other people have and building solutions to those imaginary problems instead of actual problems. So it probably helps to start from caring about the people and then the problems they care about matter more than the solutions to problems you imagine they have.
It's even easy to solve problems that you imagine you have...because again, coding is fun and people's problems, especially your own problems, aren't.
tl;dr Do something for someone you care about that that person cares about. It doesn't really matter the person you care about is you or someone else.
Good luck.
by LarryMade2 on 2/4/16, 4:59 PM
Main thing is you don't have to find some bigwig, start with some informal conversation with a small player to get some perspective first.
Working on something you know is a problem yourself works great. Doesn't hurt to ask people in other fields if your other ideas are valid, and if they are you then have to ask yourself "is it worth your time to get excited bout them?"
by drl42 on 2/4/16, 5:33 PM
For more of B2B ideas - You are better off talking to people directly. Mine you network. Look for conferences, meetups, tradeshows where you might find your audience
by tmaly on 2/4/16, 3:33 PM
by partisan on 2/4/16, 3:17 PM