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by davidw
5707 days ago
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> If you understand how the market works, If you know a bit about economics, you would see why there are not, and cannot be markets for ideas, unless someone finds a very clever way of making them 'excludable' without hordes of lawyers and contracts and various other very high transaction costs. See my other post above/below. |
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There is no market for venture ideas without the founders who are credible in executing them. Not because they are non-excludable, but because in fact they don't exist for a long time: it is very rare that somebody has an initial idea that won't change during building a company. Markets, customers, technology change.
If the world of startups would work like you say they do, it would be enough for the most creative persons to get a long term contract from VCs just to tell the ideas that pop out of their minds every morning.. Have you ever seen that happen? VCs invest in people who execute and are able to adapt ideas as circumstances change.
Btw, I am an economist so I happen to understand economics (to a certain degree :)