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Im the Ideas guy with no money

 
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Aug 29, 2008 3:08 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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Ok.  I have a couple of ideas for some businesses but havent the foggiest in how to go about getting funding or resources to turn ideas into an actual product.  Being I have 0 dollars and am unemployed and fighting for my home, I dont have much to offer outside of shares in my corporation.  

1- Who would  take a chance on an Idea?
2- Can I hire people on IOUs basically of stock and ownership?

I have total confidence one or both of these ideas will be a hit.  I`m at the point however where ideas aren`t going to pay the mortgage or feed the family.  Any help or recommendations on the next steps would be hugely appreciated.


robertj

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Aug 29, 2008 5:41 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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While it is possible to compensate people with some form of company security, I`m not a fan of that approach and have posted my reasons several times on this forum. (Drop me a PM if you want the list) 

However, more importantly - starting a business with an idea is not going to be an immediate solution to your personal cash flow issue. In fact it will probably add to it. So my recommendation on your next step would be to get your personal financial house in order. Then you can start developing your ideas into a business.



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stonesledge

posts: 1093

Aug 29, 2008 10:54 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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I am not going to say don`t do anything.. there are plenty of people who have started a business and huge success with a negative balance and facing financial uncertainty. BUT it is not the best place to start a business  in regrads to the place of mind. This is up to you. I agree with Robert, you should try to get your personal finances in order before you dive head first into a new arena. But if after thinking that over you feel that you want and can do this.. then start with a plan. Who do you have that would be interested in partnering with you with no salary etc? What would you offer? Even the small day to days in business cost money that adds up quick. What do you have in mind.. this may help me to understand the possibilty of this.In the end this is your decision of course and this is just my opinion.. and i can speak from experience. I put everything I own into what i do, and at times it can be stressful. With that being said if you know that you can give 200% every sec of the day.. then it can work.
 
Erin


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winno

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Aug 30, 2008 11:47 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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How much do you need?

An idea itself is worthless, unless you are the one who will do all the work to implement it.
No one is going to `pay` you for an idea, then just let you hire out other people to turn it into reality. Firstly, because you need to tell them what it is for them to judge, and secondly, if your idea is to get funding for other people to do it, your potential investors will just hire out the work once they have heard it.

So I have to ask, if you plan to be implementing all the work yourself, or you are merely looking for funding in order to pay others to do the work?
CraigL

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Aug 30, 2008 7:09 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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The main issue I see is that being in the middle of a crisis, financial or otherwise, you`re going to have a major uphill battle to start a business. Too many people "suddenly" discover they`re in financial trouble, and "instantly" want to replace the past stability with something wonderful and rich.

You likely would be better off clearing your table of the financial issues first. That`ll free up your mind, creative imagination, energy, and remove a whole lot of distractions from your life. At that point, you`ll be better able to see ways to bootstrap a new idea, or, as Winno says, to figure out a way to finance a decent startup.

Anyone can (and should) have ideas. It`s the implementation that counts.
CraigL2008-8-30 19:13:46
startupadvice

posts: 6

Sep 05, 2008 1:36 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
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I think before you can get people to work for you against stock/ownership, you need to take the idea to a proof of concept with a supporting business plan. If you are a person with expertise in the field where you have the idea, you should be able to do both of these with your own personal efforts. Once you reach that stage, you should try to secure some angel funding to hire people/consultant and take the idea to a prototype stage.
If your idea is in a totally different field (than of your own expertise), best to put it on hold until you are ready to put your own funds. Also, I would hesitate working on an idea which is totally outside of your current field of expertise/operation.

 

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