Tell HN: Never share your ideas
An idea I've been working on was recently posted to Hacker News and described in the same exact way.
It's an imitation, but for people who think sharing is going to make your idea better beware. It's a pretty obvious attempt to copy what I was doing and if they didn't describe it in the exact same way I wouldn't have thought much of it. Obviously, I talk too much.
Before you ask, no my project isn't finished. They're faster/better coders than I am. Yes, I'm an idiot for talking about it out loud in the first place.
Protesting and giving details would just give it more attention, so I'm content with this message. Shut up about your ideas and just work on them ---> giving this advice to myself.
25 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 58.5 ms ] threadIf there is a decent market for your product / service, then there is likely room for multiple competitors. At that point, it's all about implementation rather than speed to market (though speed to market is still important for you because the faster you get the product built the faster you are able to start seeing money from your efforts.)
History backs this up with examples everywhere. Don't worry about people stealing your ideas.
However, look at it this way.
If it is such a great idea, chances are other people have already thought about it. To assume that you are the only person to have thought about something is just selfish and egotistical. Noone should have a monopoly on ideas.
If you were the only one with that idea, I'd say 80% of the time, it wasn't such a good idea in the first place.
If someone thought your idea was worth stealing, then I'd say that you should feel confident that your idea is a good one, steam ahead and speed to market.
But it's a different story when they use your own words to describe the concept of it. It was practically my pitch describing their website.
Few people come up with the same ideas using the same words. That's just not likely. Conceptualizing is not easy. There are a lot of different ways to describe Twitter and Quora. People describe things differently. I don't think it was random.
But once you have cash rolling in, you will have tens if not hundreds of clones spawning up with in few weeks.
Tell people, then execute faster? If you're in stealth mode it wouldn't matter.
For those interested, here is one link on the subject: http://programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/19720/where-c...
Proof: Try and sell an idea.
If their implementation succeeds, they've done you a favour by doing the hard work and establishing a market. You can avoid their mistakes, build a better (or more niche, or prettier, or better marketed) implementation and profit.
If their implementation fails, they're done you a favour by either demonstrating that there isn't a market, or by highlighting fatal mistakes in their implementation.
Ok kidding aside, I once felt like you, so I tested my phobia. I had another idea that I knew I wouldn't get to in this decade, great idea, but not for me to work on yet. So I gave it away, as far and loud as I could. Well first of all, no one "got it" right (lesson: sharing vision is a HARD thing to do), secondly two dudes tried to run with it and when they came out with the prototype I was surprised how they did almost everything I told them and more, yet it looked so different. Kind of like it was their own idea altogether. And finally, it took them 1 year to get 100 users! That was enough time for me to figure out what they did right/wrong and in between and beat them! Anyway, they went back to school, haven't heard from them. The site was up until recently, but is now gone.
My advice, let someone make mistakes for you at their dime. It's one thing if you're going after an established brand that has been around for years, and its completely another if you go after someone who just launched less than a year ago. They are in infancy, making tons of mistakes, which you can learn from. Here is an idea: look at a company launched less than 6 months ago and go copy them! ;)
Additional thought:If you had followed your own advice as soon as you came up with it, your post wouldn't have ever been made.
I have an honest question for you guys. I am working on a project that needs design help. I am a coder and could use a designer. The one I could afford and connect online is another programmer with decent design skills. (he has a decent portfolio).
My project is not rocket science but it has some novel elements to it. How do you make sure that someone you outsource it for few hundred bucks is not gonna steal your idea and launch it themselves? Especially when it is someone you've never met.