Someone crashed the entire Onion market in America, made millions, walked away scott-free and starte…
We learnt that perfect monopoly can cause catastrophic damage to any economy, even the onion market.A tiny man who rocked America with Onions History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. You want to learn something, anything? Look back in history and it will surprise you just how eerily relevant it can be even in modern times. With the advent of Bitcoin, Cryptocurrencies, Tech titans and startups, you get all sorts of happenings like Tulip Mania, recessions, Feds stepping in, market manipulations a...
Burger King gave candy to a worker has worked for more than 20 years.
The Whopper, which was first introduced in 1957, was a quarter-pound, oversized burger on a vast five-inch bun that cost a reasonable 29 cents.Large corporations can be cruel and uncaring. They often claim to care about their employees, but sometimes the reality can be quite different. This is the story of Kevin Ford, a cook and cashier at Burger King who had worked tirelessly for over two decades. To celebrate his remarkable feat of never taking a sick day, Burger King decided to shower him ...
The youngest self-made billionaire just bought Forbes.
Austin Russell is an American entrepreneur, founder and CEO of Luminar Technologies. Luminar specializes in lidar and machine perception technologies, mainly used in autonomous cars. Luminar went public in December 2020, making him the world’s youngest self-made billionaire at the age of 25.Wha’s up with billionaires and news media? In a stunning turn of events, Austin Russell, the youngest self-made billionaire of 2021, has made headlines once again by acquiring a majority stake in Forbes ma...
CEO of StartupX | DeFi, NFT, Crypto, Web3.0 Builder | Co-Founder at IxSA | Director of Startup Weekend Singapore | Sustainability Champion
Someone crashed the entire Onion market in America, made millions, walked away scott-free and starte…
We learnt that perfect monopoly can cause catastrophic damage to any economy, even the onion market.A tiny man who rocked America with Onions History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. You want to learn something, anything? Look back in history and it will surprise you just how eerily relevant it can be even in modern times. With the advent of Bitcoin, Cryptocurrencies, Tech titans and startups, you get all sorts of happenings like Tulip Mania, recessions, Feds stepping in, market manipulations a...
Burger King gave candy to a worker has worked for more than 20 years.
The Whopper, which was first introduced in 1957, was a quarter-pound, oversized burger on a vast five-inch bun that cost a reasonable 29 cents.Large corporations can be cruel and uncaring. They often claim to care about their employees, but sometimes the reality can be quite different. This is the story of Kevin Ford, a cook and cashier at Burger King who had worked tirelessly for over two decades. To celebrate his remarkable feat of never taking a sick day, Burger King decided to shower him ...
The youngest self-made billionaire just bought Forbes.
Austin Russell is an American entrepreneur, founder and CEO of Luminar Technologies. Luminar specializes in lidar and machine perception technologies, mainly used in autonomous cars. Luminar went public in December 2020, making him the world’s youngest self-made billionaire at the age of 25.Wha’s up with billionaires and news media? In a stunning turn of events, Austin Russell, the youngest self-made billionaire of 2021, has made headlines once again by acquiring a majority stake in Forbes ma...
CEO of StartupX | DeFi, NFT, Crypto, Web3.0 Builder | Co-Founder at IxSA | Director of Startup Weekend Singapore | Sustainability Champion
Share Dialog
Share Dialog

Ideas don’t matter, execution is everything.
Man, I used to think that was true for so many years.
To be frank, when I first entered the startup scene a decade ago, I truly believed that ideas were everything.
A good, well thought-out idea can change the world.
The idea has to be unique, powerful, mind-blowingly amazing that makes everyone go “woah, why didn’t I think of that?!”.
Then over the years, as I met more founders, learnt from wiser mentors and educated myself running my own startup, execution seemed to matter more.
You probably heard of it too.
There are no truly original ideas today, everything is a rehash from something already done or thought up by someone smarter out there.
Execution is what separates men from boys, great startups from good startups, unicorns from zombies.
To some extent, it is invariably true.
But keep in mind, there are always exception.
I feel that execution is critical only AFTER the idea you have is well thought-out, unique and amazing.
No execution in the world can save a bad, stinky idea.
No execution in the world can help you if your startup idea suck.
Execution only works well when there is product-market fit.
That’s why you see VCs pouring money into startups that are seemingly the clones of other already successful or well-funded startups.
The presumption of product-market fit spurs the market to believe that the idea already works.
So if you are working on a truly novel idea that aims to solve a problem no one else is tackling, you won’t have PMF yet.
Without PMF, we cannot intelligently speak about execution being the limiting factor to your startup’s success.
So does idea or execution matter more?
I say its more chronologically linear than subjectively comparative.
You need a great idea first before execution can matter.
If you have PMF, execution beats idea.
If you don’t have PMF and working on something novel, the idea is definitely more important that execution.
So how do we come up with a great ideas?
Generically speaking, there are 2 ways to come up with great startup ideas.
The first is when you try to come up with as many ideas as possible and see what sticks.
That is where Paul Graham’s lore works best, speedy iteration, go outside to speak with your customers and move on to something else quickly if it fails.
As you can imagine, this has a much lower success rate.
The second is to have deeper experience in a field to see the problems and come up with real solutions that can work, which typically requires some years of work experience and domain knowledge.
This has a higher chance of success and most unicorns are like that.
That is why VCs love backing founders with good backgrounds, especially those with relevant, deep-rooted experiences in the field they are starting up in.
In short, if you wish to start something and ensure the highest chance of success, go work a few years in a field you truly care about and gain deep-rooted expertise in it.
Or take the other route and come up with as many ideas as you possibly can, and keep validating, iterating and improving it over time.
-
Which matter more?
-
#startups #business #startupx #growth #success #socialmedia #culture #jail #strategy #eth #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #bayc #nft #Martin #web3 #ideas #execution #startuplore

Ideas don’t matter, execution is everything.
Man, I used to think that was true for so many years.
To be frank, when I first entered the startup scene a decade ago, I truly believed that ideas were everything.
A good, well thought-out idea can change the world.
The idea has to be unique, powerful, mind-blowingly amazing that makes everyone go “woah, why didn’t I think of that?!”.
Then over the years, as I met more founders, learnt from wiser mentors and educated myself running my own startup, execution seemed to matter more.
You probably heard of it too.
There are no truly original ideas today, everything is a rehash from something already done or thought up by someone smarter out there.
Execution is what separates men from boys, great startups from good startups, unicorns from zombies.
To some extent, it is invariably true.
But keep in mind, there are always exception.
I feel that execution is critical only AFTER the idea you have is well thought-out, unique and amazing.
No execution in the world can save a bad, stinky idea.
No execution in the world can help you if your startup idea suck.
Execution only works well when there is product-market fit.
That’s why you see VCs pouring money into startups that are seemingly the clones of other already successful or well-funded startups.
The presumption of product-market fit spurs the market to believe that the idea already works.
So if you are working on a truly novel idea that aims to solve a problem no one else is tackling, you won’t have PMF yet.
Without PMF, we cannot intelligently speak about execution being the limiting factor to your startup’s success.
So does idea or execution matter more?
I say its more chronologically linear than subjectively comparative.
You need a great idea first before execution can matter.
If you have PMF, execution beats idea.
If you don’t have PMF and working on something novel, the idea is definitely more important that execution.
So how do we come up with a great ideas?
Generically speaking, there are 2 ways to come up with great startup ideas.
The first is when you try to come up with as many ideas as possible and see what sticks.
That is where Paul Graham’s lore works best, speedy iteration, go outside to speak with your customers and move on to something else quickly if it fails.
As you can imagine, this has a much lower success rate.
The second is to have deeper experience in a field to see the problems and come up with real solutions that can work, which typically requires some years of work experience and domain knowledge.
This has a higher chance of success and most unicorns are like that.
That is why VCs love backing founders with good backgrounds, especially those with relevant, deep-rooted experiences in the field they are starting up in.
In short, if you wish to start something and ensure the highest chance of success, go work a few years in a field you truly care about and gain deep-rooted expertise in it.
Or take the other route and come up with as many ideas as you possibly can, and keep validating, iterating and improving it over time.
-
Which matter more?
-
#startups #business #startupx #growth #success #socialmedia #culture #jail #strategy #eth #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #bayc #nft #Martin #web3 #ideas #execution #startuplore

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