The Secret Formula
for Big Ideas
You may be thinking, "How can I come up with that next big idea?" Jonathan Swanson, the co-founder and president of Thumbtack, created a rigorous process to come up with world-changing ideas
Big
ideas--we all want 'em. We've all thought, at one time or another, "I
could have come up with that!" Big ideas are like gold,
especially when you are prepared to put in the work and the effort to
make them come alive.
So
as we get close to kicking off a new year, you may be thinking, "How
can I come up with that next big idea?" Jonathan Swanson, the
co-founder and president of Thumbtack, created a rigorous process to
come up with the idea for his business--a platform that connects
customers with trusted service providers in a range of
industries--which he says has the potential to "reshape a huge
slice of the U.S. economy."
But
it took a while to get there. How, exactly? I recently sat down with
Swanson to uncover his method for generating world-changing ideas.
How
did you come up with the idea for Thumbtack?
We
did what you're not supposed to do--we started a company before we
had an idea. My partners and I had this desire to make a big
difference in the world. We knew the best way was to solve a really
big problem that doesn't just affect us, but affects large numbers of
people all over the world.
We
went out looking for big problems that affected hundreds of millions
of people in all walks of life. My partners and I would have a phone
call every week where we discussed and brainstormed different ideas.
The heuristic was, "Let's look for a problem that affects
hundreds of millions of people and that we think can be solved with
the application of technology." That was our search
criteria--when we searched Google, we were searching the world for
startup ideas and our search was "big problem and can be solved
with technology."
We
would talk and brainstorm different parts of life that were broken or
frustrating. Whenever we had an idea that was interesting, we would
dig into it more and break it up and we would split up homework and
research. We would see if it was promising or if others were working
on it and come back in a week and repeat the process. What we found
was that there were problems that were superficially interesting and
lots of problems that were big problems, but once you dug into them,
they were harder to fix than we imagined or lots of ideas were
already being worked on by lots of people. Basically, we repeated the
process for over a year.
What
are the signs that an idea is a good one?
The
most important thing is that it solves a problem that affects lots of
people. That is the heuristic for knowing that you're solving a
problem that is worthwhile. The second thing that is harder is
knowing that you have the technology or solution to solve that
problem. It depends on what sort of company you are starting.
Sometimes that means that you want to get into an area where people
haven't started and you are first to market. When we came up with the
idea of launching a financial-management aggregator, we discovered
Mint. We felt that Mint was so far ahead of us that it didn't make
sense for us to try it. However, with Thumbtack, the more we dug into
it, all the current solutions were old. Nobody had re-imagined how
customers and professional services could come together in a service
marketplace. For us, we found that we are solving a big problem but
we also had a new view of how it could be solved. We had an idea that
had not come to life.
What
excites you about Thumbtack?
The
most exciting thing is that we get to reshape a huge slice of the
economy. Ebay, Amazon, and Zappos have changed how you buy products,
but nobody has redesigned the service industry. The Yellow Pages are
100 years old. Yelp and Angie's List are iterations of the Yellow
Pages. Half of the economy has not been disrupted in the last 100
years and we have the opportunity to change how people buy and sell
services. The scope is really exciting and we get to change the
quality of service in a meaningful way. With Uber, the quality of
service is really high--they offer you a mint and water. In a taxi,
the service is not great. It's not that Uber has hired different
drivers; the difference is that Uber has data on the quality of the
drive and uses that data to incentivize the driver to improve the
service. It's really fun to be a part of such a big project.
What
advice would you give to aspiring entrepreneurs who want to come up
with their own big ideas?
First,
solve a problem that affects a lot of people, not just yourself.
Second,
you really need co-founders to explore ideas. It's really difficult
to do that on your own. Having people you trust and respect that you
can bounce ideas off of tremendously benefits the ideation and
brainstorm phase. It's also a lot more fun.
Finally,
you need to have a kind of contradiction of confidence and humility.
You have to have the confidence to do something that has never been
done, but you also need to have a lot of humility, because nothing is
more humbling than entrepreneurship. You learn a lot about yourself
and make a lot of mistakes. You have to very quickly own up to your
mistakes. Having both confidence and humility simultaneously is
important, but difficult.
How
can you tell if an idea has the power to change the world?
The
easy answer is that if you are solving a problem for hundreds of
millions people, that changes the world. If it's something that is
frustrating for that many people and you solve it, you're helping the
world in a meaningful way. The challenge with entrepreneurship is
that you don't know if it's going to work, and if it's obvious that
it's going to work, it wouldn't be a good startup because lots of
other people would have done it. Along the lines of having confidence
and humility, you need to believe that the idea can change the world,
and you have to have the grit to stick it out--often for years--while
you are making it happen. You have to be willing to go through the
ups and downs of the roller-coaster entrepreneur life.
BY LAURA
GARNETThttp://www.inc.com/laura-garnett/the-secret-formula-for-big-ideas.html?cid=em01016week50d
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