Non-obvious problems
I’ve seen a ton of startups from my time building Product Hunt and now investing in early-stage opportunities at Weekend Fund.
Most founders pursue obvious problems. These can succeed if met with non-obvious solutions, but I’m most interested to see founders tackle non-obvious problems.
A framework from venture
In early-stage investing, there's a well-known framework to consider when evaluating opportunities
If you invest in a company that is wrong, you'll lose money regardless of whether it was consensus or non-consensus.[1]
If you invest in a company that is right and consensus, it’s harder to achieve outsized returns because the market already priced in the potential when the check was written.[2]
If you invest in a company that is right and non-consensus, you're more likely to see outlier returns because the market hasn't priced in the potential you saw early.
There's a similar framework for founders to consider when pursuing an idea:
Obvious problem, obvious solution
If you pursue an obvious problem with an obvious solution, you're unlikely to succeed. Why? There's likely a graveyard of similar attempts before you that didn't work for legitimate reasons.
There may also be dozens of competitors chasing the same idea, making it increasingly difficult to break through the noise and attract customers.
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Obvious problem, non-obvious solution
If you pursue an obvious problem with a non-obvious solution, you might succeed. The non-obvious solution might be possible only now due to technology or cultural shifts. This might be the first time the problem can be solved or the introduction of a dramatically better solution to an obvious, long-standing problem. It might be uncovered from an earned secret or insight from your past experience.
The downside is that you may find fast-followers who are chasing the same obvious problem. Once the solution is known, it may be easy for competitors to replicate and sell into their existing, highly relevant customer base.
Non-obvious problem, obvious or non-obvious solution
If you pursue a non-obvious problem with an obvious or non-obvious solution you'll be met with far less competition and the potential to establish yourself as the leader of a new category. Your target customer will be less inundated with potential solutions, likely more receptive.
Non-obvious problems are often driven by a change in the world. It might be a new problem, a problem that is affecting a growing market, or a problem that is becoming more painful.
How to find non-obvious problems
By definition, non-obvious problems require a unique insight or rare perspective. Consider:
Of course, startup success entirely depends on one's ability to solve a real problem with the right solution.
If you're pursuing an idea, consider where it fits along these axes. Perhaps the biggest blue ocean opportunities are in non-obvious problems.
[1] Unless you sell at the right time in secondary markets.
[2] Of course, there are outliers. That's the nature of early-stage investing.
[3] We wrote a deep dive on Deel on Signature Block if you’re interested.
Retired. Again. This time for good.
9 个月Insightful!dYdd
Co-founder @ JUICE & Partner @ MAGIC Fund
9 个月Focus on problems that are worth your time, and can save you time in the long-run. Amazing insight, thanks for sharing!
Helping early stage startups with I Growth I Fundraising I Sales
9 个月Very insightful! Thank you for sharing!
Finding hidden revenue leaks for B2B SaaS companies through Deep Revenue Analysis
9 个月This should be interesting. Adding it to my list to read today.
Repeat founder (1 Exit) | ex Moovit (acquired by Intel for $1B) | Angel investor | CEO & Co-founder Upscalers
9 个月i added you soni can DM you. i’d love to exchange few thoughts on this