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by wilfra 4850 days ago
It's not just posturing, their success came easy to them and thus they truly believe success is easy. They don't recognize the huge role luck plays. There is also the fact that the problem you guys are describing is not a problem at all to many people, like the guys who say this is easy.

I am one of those for whom ideas are not a problem at all. Nor is assessing other peoples ideas to quickly figure out which would likely have a market and which would not.

I've just added writing a blog post about this to my to-do list, hopefully I can come up with something good and help a whole lot of you improve upon this if it hits the front page. It's going to be really difficult though to put into words exactly how and why I can easily do this. I've never really thought about that - I just do it. It comes naturally.

I'm going to put a lot more thought to this, but one thing that comes quickly to mind:

Engineers are trained to think of all of the possible things which might go wrong and prevent those from happening. That's the exact opposite mindset of a productive idea bot. The idea bot thinks of all of the possible things that might go right and only thinks about what might go wrong later (often times pointing those things out to the idea bot is a major role of a good engineer). With experience and practice they'll be able to dismiss ideas faster because they know what can go wrong but they still have an optimistic approach and a very open mind to new ideas. Engineers can have a pessimistic approach and a somewhat closed mind about new ideas.

So what you need to do is learn to flip that switch in your brain. Once you start actually building something, think about what can go wrong. But when you're thinking of ideas, dismiss every negative thought that enters your mind and think positive. What could go right, how much could I make from this if all goes perfectly etc. Get yourself excited. Excitement about ideas breeds more ideas.