My First Million
The best business ideas come from noticing what's working and doing it better, faster, or for a different audience.
Most entrepreneurial failures come from ego-driven overcomplication rather than insufficient innovation
The Reasoning
Entrepreneurs want to prove their specialness by creating complex solutions, but consumers prefer simple improvements. Overcomplication is often a defense mechanism to justify personal importance and valuation rather than serving customer needs.
What Needs to Be True
- Consumers have limited capacity for processing change
- Simple solutions are harder to create than complex ones
- Entrepreneur self-worth often ties to solution complexity
- Market success correlates more with adoption than innovation level
Counterargument
Some problems genuinely require complex solutions, and breakthrough innovations often involve multiple simultaneous changes that initially seem overcomplicated.
What Would Change This View
Data showing that complex, multi-faceted product launches consistently outperform simple, single-change approaches in consumer markets
Implications for Builders
Resist urge to showcase intelligence through product complexity
Focus on single, powerful changes rather than multiple improvements
Test whether complexity serves customers or just personal ego
Simplification should be viewed as a skill, not a limitation
Example Application
“Eric's failed laundry detergent was 10x concentrated with innovative dispensing, but too novel for consumers to believe effectiveness. Simpler changes like Olly's square bottles succeeded where complex innovations failed.”