"Top
Idea"
I realized recently that what one
thinks about in the shower in the morning is more important than I'd thought. I
knew it was a good time to have ideas. Now I'd go further: now I'd say it's
hard to do a really good job on anything you don't think about in the shower.
Everyone who's worked on difficult
problems is probably familiar with the phenomenon of working hard to figure
something out, failing, and then suddenly seeing the answer a bit later while
doing something else. There's a kind of thinking you do without trying to. I'm
increasingly convinced this type of thinking is not merely helpful in solving
hard problems, but necessary. The tricky part is, you can only control it
indirectly.
I think most people have one top idea
in their mind at any given time. That's the idea their thoughts will drift
toward when they're allowed to drift freely. And this idea will thus tend to
get all the benefit of that type of thinking, while others are starved of it.
Which means it's a disaster to let the wrong idea become the top one in your
mind.
What made this clear to me was having
an idea I didn't want as the top one in my mind for two long stretches.
I'd noticed startups got way less
done when they started raising money, but it was not till we ourselves raised
money that I understood why. The problem is not the actual time it takes to
meet with investors. The problem is that once you start raising money, raising
money becomes the top idea in your mind. That becomes what you think about when
you take a shower in the morning.And that means other questions aren't.
I'd hated raising money when I was
running Viaweb, but I'd forgotten why I hated it so much. When we raised money
for Y Combinator, I remembered. Money matters are particularly likely to become
the top idea in your mind. The reason is that they have to be. It's hard to get
money. It's not the sort of thing that happens by default. It's not going to
happen unless you let it become the thing you think about in the shower. And
then you'll make little progress on anything else you'd rather be working
on.
(I hear similar complaints from
friends who are professors. Professors nowadays seem to have become
professional fundraisers who do a little research on the side. It may be time
to fix that.)
The reason this struck me so forcibly
is that for most of the preceding 10 years I'd been able to think about what I
wanted. So the contrast when I couldn't was sharp. But I don't think this
problem is unique to me, because just about every startup I've seen grinds to a
halt when they start raising money—or talking to acquirers.
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