π‘ Choose & Validate Your Business Idea
π‘ Choose & Validate Your Business Idea
Don't build before you validate. Here's how to find the right idea and get proof people will pay — before you spend a dime.
The Biggest Mistake Most People Make
Most aspiring entrepreneurs spend weeks — sometimes months — building before they ever talk to a single real customer. A website, a logo, a product, a whole brand system. Then they launch and hear: nothing. Crickets.
The fix is not a better product. It's validation first. Validation means getting real evidence — not just opinions from supportive friends and family — that actual humans will pay money for what you're offering.
The Idea Sweet Spot — Where Good Businesses Live
π― Find Your Intersection
The most durable business ideas live where three things overlap. If you only have two, you have a problem.
Missing one? Good at it + enjoy it but nobody pays = hobby. Good at it + people pay but you hate it = burnout by year two. Enjoy it + people pay but you're not good at it yet = learning curve so steep it may not be survivable. Find all three.
6 Ways to Find a Business Idea (That's Actually Viable)
- Your own frustrations. What problem do you face repeatedly with no good solution? If it bothers you, it probably bothers thousands of others. Some of the best companies in the world started because the founder was annoyed by a gap in the market.
- Your professional skills. What could someone pay you for outside of your 9-to-5? Consulting, coaching, fractional work — this is usually the fastest path to first dollar because you already have the expertise and credibility.
- What people keep asking you for help with. If friends, coworkers, or family keep coming to you for the same thing — that's a market signal. You're already the go-to person for something.
- A proven model in another market. A business working in another city, industry, or country that hasn't arrived in your market yet. You're not copying — you're serving an underserved audience with a model that already has proof of concept.
- Gaps in what competitors do poorly. Read the 1-star and 3-star reviews of market leaders. What do customers consistently complain about? That complaint is your product roadmap.
- Emerging trends creating new needs. What's growing rapidly — and what does that growth require? AI tools, the creator economy, aging population, remote work infrastructure, sustainability — every major trend creates dozens of adjacent business opportunities.
The 5-Step Validation Process
Run through these in order before you spend significant money or time building.
- 1 Write your hypothesis in one sentence "I believe [this specific type of person] struggles with [this specific problem] and would pay [$X] for [this specific solution]." If you can't say it clearly in one sentence, you need more thinking time before you need more building time. Vague hypotheses lead to products that solve nothing clearly.
- 2 Research whether a market already exists Google the problem. Search Amazon for related products and read the reviews. Look at Reddit communities. Check Google Trends for search volume trajectory. Look at competitor pricing. Spend 2–3 focused hours doing this. It can save you months and thousands of dollars.
What you're looking for: Are people spending money on partial solutions? Do competitors exist? What are customers complaining about in those competitor reviews? That's your opening. - 3 Talk to 5–10 real potential customers Not your friends (they'll be nice). Not your family (they love you). Actual strangers or acquaintances who match your target customer profile. Find them in Facebook groups, Reddit communities, LinkedIn, or at networking events. Ask open-ended questions:
"Tell me about the last time you dealt with [problem]."
"What have you tried? What didn't work about it?"
"What would a perfect solution look like for you?"
Do not pitch. Do not sell. Just listen. The goal is to understand their world, not to convince them of your idea. - 4 Test demand before you build Create the simplest possible proof of concept. A landing page describing the outcome you deliver with a "Join Waitlist" or "Pre-Order" button. A social post describing the service and asking who's interested. A one-paragraph pitch in a relevant online community. If real people respond with interest or questions — you have signal. If nobody responds at all — the market doesn't care yet, and that's important information.
- 5 Get one paying customer — at any price Offer your first service or product at a discount in exchange for feedback. One real person paying you real money is worth more than 500 people saying "that sounds great." Money changes the commitment level on both sides. If you can't get even one person to pay anything, you need to rethink the offer, the audience, or both.
Know Your Ideal Customer (Before You Know Your Product)
A customer avatar — also called an Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) — is a detailed portrait of your best-fit customer. Build this before you build anything else. The more specific you are, the more powerfully your marketing will work.
- Age range
- Location (local, national, global?)
- Income level
- Job title or industry
- Business stage (if B2B)
- What keeps them up at night?
- What do they want more than anything?
- What have they already tried that failed?
- Where do they spend time online?
- What would make them say yes immediately?
Understand Your Competition (This Is Not Optional)
Many new entrepreneurs are afraid to research competitors because they think it means there's "no room." The opposite is true — no competition usually means no market. Competition means people are buying.
What to analyze for each top competitor:
- What they offer — exact product/service, features, scope
- What they charge — pricing tiers, models (subscription, one-time, hourly)
- What their customers love — top-rated reviews, testimonials
- What their customers hate — 1-star and 3-star reviews are gold
- Who they are NOT serving — underserved segments, gaps in their positioning
- How they market — what channels, what messaging, what content
Your competitive advantage doesn't have to be a completely different product. It can be better service, a more specific audience, a different price point, a stronger community, or just showing up more consistently.
Market Research: Free Tools That Work
Types of MVPs — Test Cheap, Learn Fast
A Minimum Viable Product (MVP) is the smallest, cheapest version of your idea that still delivers enough value to get real feedback. You are not launching your full vision — you are testing whether the core problem and solution resonate.
- Landing page MVP: A simple page describing your offer with a signup or pre-order. Zero product built. Tests: will people express interest?
- Service-first MVP: Offer your service manually to 3–5 clients before building any automation or tech. Tests: will people pay and are they satisfied?
- Concierge MVP: Do everything by hand for early customers to understand exactly what they need — then automate later.
- Pre-sale MVP: Sell the product before it's built. If enough people buy, you build it. If not, you refund and move on. Tests: real purchase intent.
- Prototype/demo MVP: A mockup, a slide deck, or a clickable prototype. Tests: does the concept resonate visually?
Red Flags — When to Kill or Pivot the Idea
- π© Nobody you've talked to has actually paid for any solution to this problem — ever
- π© Every person who "loves the idea" is your friend, family member, or someone who owes you a favor
- π© You cannot explain in one sentence who your customer is and what problem you solve
- π© There is zero existing competition — this almost always means no market, not an open opportunity
- π© You've been "working on it" for 6+ months with no paying customer or real user feedback
- π© Your competitive advantage is "we're better" with no specific proof of what better means
- π© The market is entirely dominated by massive companies and your plan is to take their customers with no clear differentiation
- π© The only way to make money is if everything goes perfectly and you immediately get thousands of customers
β Your Section 2 Checklist
Click each item as you complete it.
"I believe [specific person] has [specific problem] and would pay [$X] for [specific solution]."
Is the market growing, stable, or shrinking? Saved a screenshot for reference.
Listed the 3 most common complaints — those are my opportunities.
Asked open-ended questions. Listened. Documented what I heard — especially surprises.
A "join waitlist" or "pre-order" button is enough. Real interest = signal to proceed.
Demographics, psychographics, pain points, language they use, where they hang out.
What they offer, what they charge, what customers love, and what they complain about.
A waitlist deposit, pre-sale, or actual payment. Real money changes everything.
Landed page, service-first, pre-sale, or prototype — whichever fits your business.
π― Quick-Scan Summary
- Find your intersection: what you're good at + what you enjoy + what people pay for. All three.
- Validate before you build — talk to real strangers, not just supportive friends
- Research free: Google Trends, Reddit, Amazon reviews, Facebook groups, competitor sites
- Build the smallest possible test (landing page, pre-sale, manual service) before investing in the full product
- Know your customer in specific, detailed terms before you finalize your product
- Analyze competitors to find the gap — what they do poorly is what you do well
- Red flag: if nobody's ever paid for any version of this solution — rethink before you build
Last Updated: April 2026 · Part 2 of 10 · Blaque Net Start Your Business Series
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