Startup Ideas
In particular, you don’t need a brilliant idea to start a startup around! But If you need some guidance and Google “startup ideas courses” you will find good number of institutes including Stanford and Harvard university offering courses such as How to build a startup(udacity.com), how to start a startup(startupclass.samaltman.com, startupclass.co), startup business ideas(udemy.com), startup garage(Stanford Graduate School of Business) etc., also IIT Madras is going an extra mile to promote the startup culture by allowing its students to take semester offs for focusing on their startup ventures…
Would like to share some points about startup ideas from the talk delivered by Mr. Paul Graham (co-founder of Y Combinator the seed capital firm)at Harvard Computer Society.…………………………..
The way a startup makes money is to offer people better technology than they have now. But what people have now is often so bad that it doesn’t take brilliance to do better.
Google’s plan, for example, was simply to create a search site that didn’t suck. They had three new ideas: index more of the Web, use links to rank search results, and have clean, simple web pages with unintrusive keyword-based ads. Above all, they were determined to make a site that was good to use. No doubt there are great technical tricks within Google, but the overall plan was straightforward. And while they probably have bigger ambitions now, this alone brings them a billion dollars a year.
There are plenty of other areas that are just as backward as search was before Google. I can think of several heuristics for generating ideas for startups, but most reduce to this: look at something people are trying to do, and figure out how to do it in a way that doesn’t suck.
For example, dating sites currently suck far worse than search did before Google. They all use the same simple-minded model. They seem to have approached the problem by thinking about how to do database matches instead of how dating works in the real world. An undergrad could build something better as a class project. And yet there’s a lot of money at stake. Online dating is a valuable business now, and it might be worth a hundred times as much if it worked.
An idea for a startup, however, is only a beginning. A lot of would-be startup founders think the key to the whole process is the initial idea, and from that point all you have to do is execute. Venture capitalists know better. If you go to VC firms with a brilliant idea that you’ll tell them about if they sign a nondisclosure agreement, most will tell you to get lost. That shows how much a mere idea is worth. The market price is less than the inconvenience of signing an NDA.
Another sign of how little the initial idea is worth is the number of startups that change their plan en route. Microsoft’s original plan was to make money selling programming languages, of all things. Their current business model didn’t occur to them until IBM dropped it in their lap five years later.
Ideas for startups are worth something, certainly, but the trouble is, they’re not transferrable. They’re not something you could hand to someone else to execute. Their value is mainly as starting points: as questions for the people who had them to continue thinking about. What matters is not ideas, but the people who have them. Good people can fix bad ideas, but good ideas can’t save bad people.
Here I’m sharing some interesting links from which you may get ideas about your startup:
- 100 startup ideas
- yourstory.com article on startup ideas for college students in india
- 7 simple startup ideas
- entrepreneur.com article on low cost businesses
- mytopbusinessideas.com