📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

No One Really Cares About Your Game-Changing App Idea Unless you build something, you're all talk. Investors want a product, not an idea.

By Steve Eakin

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Westend61 | Getty Images

Has anyone ever paid you for an idea?

Unless you're already an entrepreneur with at least one nine-figure exit behind you, the answer is no. The reasoning behind this is simple: People buy products, not ideas. Product can have a broad definition, but it sure as hell isn't an idea.

Instagram, Google Search, Netflix, these are all products. And their ideas weren't valued so high, it was the product.

Even a tiny, slightly embarrassing beta version is still a product that people can get behind. Because that's all a product is: the execution of an idea.

Not just coming up with the idea for an app, but building it. Not just coming up with a great idea for a startup, but launching it.

Execution is everything and ideas are nothing.

Execution is why startups get funding. Connections to investors only get a foot in the door. If you want that check you think you need, the investors need to think the idea is good, but more than that, they need to believe that you have the ability to execute.

This is a mind blowing revelation.

Every time that something cool comes into your mind, you have to stop saying "I can make millions on this idea if I only…" Then, eventually, someone builds it while you make excuses to why you can't do it yourself.

If that sounds familiar, you just need to take action, and follow this simple formula:

1. Get the idea.

You probably have at least one idea for an app. It doesn't have to be some grand billion dollar app idea that will eventually take over the world. It has to be an idea that will make you more money than you put in. A $1,000 idea is much more common, and funnily enough, those are what most app empires are built on.

Related: A Step-by-Step Guide To Building Your First Mobile App

2. Plan your income.

Apps can make money in a lot of ways. Decide how you want it to make you money so you don't have to worry about it when things start scaling up.

3. Find your "MVP."

Discover the bare-minimum features that your users need to use your app. That's your MVP, or minimum viable product, and the only thing that you should be working to build. Anything else is bells and whistles, so ignore it.

Your users will love you for it.

Related: Getting Started with Small Business App Development

4. Build it.

Build it out using your own resources. Your own time, money and connections. This will force you to get it done right for the lowest cost and keep a laser focus on your users. And no, you don't need to learn to code.

Related: 5 Development Mistakes That Can Destroy Your Mobile App

Don't worry about investors this early or you'll never start. For your first app, keep your fate in your own hands.

Most of all, always value execution over ideas. Only then will you have the courage to take that leap of faith every once in awhile and build something instead of dreaming about what life would be like if it were built already.

Steve Eakin

Founder of Startup Black Belt

Steve Eakin is a speaker, investor, startup advisor and the founder of Startup Black Belt, where he helps tech startups launch, grow and scale.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Devices

Get This Powerful Refurbished Lenovo Mini Desktop for Just $180 Through April 30

Get more for your money and breeze through business tasks with a robust A-grade refurbished mini desktop.

Side Hustle

3 Secrets to Starting a Small Business Side Hustle That Gives Your Day Job a Run for Its Money, According to People Who Did Just That — and Made Millions

Almost anyone can start a side hustle — but only those ready to level up can use it to out-earn their 9-5s.

Business News

Elon Musk Reveals His Tactics for Building Successful Companies, Including Sleeping Under His Desk and 'Working Every Waking Hour'

Musk shared the secrets on a podcast with Nicolai Tangen, CEO of the $1.6 trillion Norges Bank.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

Ring Camera Owners Will Receive $5.6 Million in Payments After FTC-Amazon Settlement. Here's How Many Customers Are Eligible — And How They'll Get the Cash.

The payouts are a result of a June 2023 settlement with Amazon over privacy violation allegations against the camera company.

Business News

Jeff Bezos and Amazon Execs Used An Encrypted Messaging App to Talk About 'Sensitive Business Matters,' FTC Alleges

The FTC's filing claims Bezos and other execs used a disappearing message feature even after Amazon knew it was being investigated.