The title of this post<p>> Your high IQ will kill your startup<p>is too strong to be correct: The claim of
"will kill" is claiming too much;
'might kill' is closer to being correct.<p>In more detail, the OP essentially assumes that
an intelligent person will try to 'coast' or
'relax' and depend just on their intelligence
instead of working hard, learning more that is
important, and doing the actual work needed
for success. This assumption need not be
correct in all cases, and my experience
indicates that it is significantly wrong.<p>Why? The OP mentions early school where
intelligent people do well easily.
Well, then, commonly they also get
motivated to continue on in school. By the
time they get to some junior/senior level
courses in their major, to courses in
graduate school, to the published peer-reviewed
papers as background for their research,
and to their Ph.D, research, they necessarily
will have plenty of opportunities to
encounter material where they have to
work their little fingers, toes, and tails
off. E.g., in computer science, if really
intelligent, then jump all the way to tenured
full professor in one stroke, just settle
the question P versus NP. So far apparently
no one has been intelligent enough to
solve that problem.<p>I've seen plenty of
really intelligent people work their
fingers, toes, and tails off in graduate
school. Net, there are plenty of challenges
in graduate school strong enough for the
most intelligent people to have to
work their fingers, toes, and tails off
with levels of hard work that would
compare with hard work from anyone
from a galley slave, a dirt farmer,
etc.<p>Often, including in parts of school, intelligence
alone is not enough, and plenty of intelligent
people are smart enough to see this point. And,
in cases of work challenges, since their pride from their
intelligence is being tested, usually in a sense that is at least semi-public and, thus, visible to others from whom the person wants respect, they are motivated
to do the real work needed for success.<p>While the OP is claiming too much, it is possible
for intelligent people to fail and for various reasons
quite different from what the OP explained.