The concept that ideas aren't important is getting really old. Sure, once you have your idea, the execution and vision are what's going to make you successful. But is one idea better than another? Yes. Do you want great vision and execution to go along with a brain-dead stupid idea? No.<p>Ideas don't suck; ideas are important; ideas are the genesis for everything else talked about in this article. Sure, it's just part of the foundation of what will turn into a business, but it's often the cornerstone of that foundation.
The problem with visions is that being a visionary is even harder than keeping to a diet.<p>If it's a good vision everyone will think you're crazy, if it's an awesome vision you probably <i>are</i> crazy, if it's an incredible vision you probably won't live long enough to enjoy its coming to fruition.<p>But always keep in mind that even a vision isn't everything, because a vision without execution is merely hallucination.<p>Personally I try to have a good mix of both. A vision and then a bunch of ideas around the vision to keep me excited, energetic and up all night. It might not be the most efficient of ways, but it sure helps deal with an internet-reduced attention span.
This meme "execution is everything; ideas are useless" is rampant here. I also believe it's a bad frame of mind. There is little distinction between an idea and a vision. A vision is just a fully fleshed-out idea; a collection of ideas: some inspirational, but many technical, economic or sociological.<p>I understand why the meme gained traction: too many people put everything into just one inspirational idea and never put enough effort into the execution of this idea -- the community wants to distinguish themselves as superior to these people so we attempt to tell them off and posture about execution in order to prove to everybody else here that we 'get things done'. But is talking about it really the way of proving that? Are we taking this concept too far merely because we want acceptance in the community?<p>All you need is to have a good idea, some supporting ideas about how to turn it into a business and to put a lot of effort into its execution. The rest of the article about a vision went into what was needed but not having ideas is not the way of going about this. You want to have some disruptive ideas as part of your execution.
tl;dr : 'hey, look at me, I'm a <i>doer</i>!'<p>how many more blogs do we need about this exact notion? here's the thing about ideas: they don't need to be turned into business models to be incredibly valuable (cf. the world wide web). and here's the thing about business models: it doesn't necessarily take another business to make them obsolete. so I see why startup people want to downplay the value of ideas constantly, but it gets tiring
If you stop having ideas, you're done for. It's not ideas that suck, it's acting on the wrong ones. In order to have good ideas, you have to let your mind wander, and that means in addition to the good ones, there will also be plenty that are unrealistic or silly, but they all supply wood to the fire. It <i>is</i> possible to work hard, stay focused, and have ideas churning at the same time.
I don't buy the idea that ideas suck.<p>Less when the idea is of easy execution and there are ideas where execution matters less! for example if you have an idea that can be implemented in short time and you can be in the market in less than three months then the idea matters a lot.<p>I'll give you some rants of how I handle my ideas. Like everyone in HN I have a lot of ideas, so I put them in a XY graph, in the X the time needed to implement and have some market feedback on the idea (the time can be logarithmic, it doesn't need to be accurate). Then the Y is the value of the idea. If you want to add other dimensions like complexity or resources do it, this can be added with colors or with a bigger circle instead of a point I try graph as many ideas as possible.<p>Then, I trace a line in the 3 months. It's very possible that there are no ideas there or very few, so I try to "fix" the ideas or invent new ones to fit in the 3 months time.<p>This is like a game of idea generation.
Re: Ideas suck!
<a href="http://hackerne.ws/item?id=2453957" rel="nofollow">http://hackerne.ws/item?id=2453957</a><p>Ideas don't suck. You do if you think you should stay with only one idea. If you have only one idea then go for it! That's great! But don't limit yourself.<p>In my case I found a way that works for me very well after a lot of frustration.<p>Painters don't get famous if they have only one painting; musicians don't have a career if they write only one song, no matter how popular it is.<p>The "just one idea" is bs. Stay away from it. If you have many start with one and if you get tired or bored continue with a new one. Then come back to the first one.<p>The most creative people in the planet don't do one idea at a time.<p>Think about it!
Bad ideas "suck". Good ideas are golden.<p>With bad ideas, execution has to do "everything" and is "difficult" and likely a fool's errand.<p>Good ideas are difficult and rare but make successful execution routine, and the US is awash in the ability to do routine execution well.<p>Key is how to find good ideas and evaluate them. Can that be done? Yes, the US DoD has been doing that with astounding accuracy for 70 years. The US NIH and NSF also do well. There's even 'education' in how to do that: It's call a Ph.D. from a good US research university.<p>Here endith Lecture 1 in 'Ideas 101 for Entrepreneurs'.<p>In this elementary course, the author of the post of this thread didn't do well. Neither did KPCB VC Doerr who at<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/nBvuirDPHKA&hl=en_US" rel="nofollow">http://www.youtube.com/v/nBvuirDPHKA&hl=en_US</a><p>claimed that "Ideas are easy" and "plentiful" and "Execution is everything.". Neither did Union Square VC Wilson who at<p><a href="http://www.avc.com/a_vc/2011/04/how-to-allocate-founder-and-employee-equity.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.avc.com/a_vc/2011/04/how-to-allocate-founder-and-...</a><p>said "Ideas are pretty much worthless.".<p>For the most diplomatic view, mostly by an 'idea' they mean some nearly instant guess at a one sentence description of what would make a good description of a product or service to a customer, and the hope is that the business would be good.<p>Our society has a lot on working with ideas from 'intellectual property', 'trade secrets', patents, pharmaceutical research, peer-reviewed original research, military classification, and more.<p>Really what we have here is that the author, Doerr, Wilson, etc. either are so astoundingly ignorant that their understanding of ideas is somewhere below the fourth grade level for a poor student or that they have their own reasons for joining in the drum beat that ideas "suck". Either way they are embarrassing themselves in public. No good entrepreneur should want anything to do with them.