First, let me say that in general I hate the negativity that has come to infect Hacker News, so it is only with much self-consciousness that I provide the following negative reaction. The mixergy post says "If you’ve heard me say that entrepreneurs should start by finding the pain, wait till you hear the first thing today’s guest did." (And the submission headline supports this lede.) The advice within the recording is that the founders of Submittable got together and made a list of their personal problems, and Submittable was like third on their list. I don't think that's particularly novel helpful advice given that it's basically the entirety of Paul Graham's famous essay "How to Get Startup Ideas" which I hope everyone here has read. If there were more detail on other ideas and ways to find startup ideas, it would be fine, but this is a one/two sentence explanation of the most obvious and well-known method, being used to justify the entire interview. The real question is what do you do when you don't have any problems and you don't know anyone with business problems.That said, this isn't a reflection on Submittable as a company or the Submittable founders. I'm sure they are awesome and have an awesome service, and I hope they have the best of luck.
AndrewWarner|13 years ago
I think there's more to my interview than your short summary. For example, Michael made a mistake that's common to people who start with their own pain, so he pretty much had to scrap a whole year's worth of work.
What he learned was that he -- as an author -- was experiencing a ton of pain when he submitted to manuscripts to publishers. But the pain wasn't caused by the way he submitted his work to them. It was caused by the way their processed what he (and other authors) sent.
The cure for this was to have outside conversations. Picking the right person to talk to is a whole other part of this interview, but I won't get into it here. I don't want to recreate the interview.
asdf333|13 years ago
Some really great quotes about what kind of competition he's most afraid of.
Really thoughtful interview.
jasonshen|13 years ago
Not everyone has read pg's essay, even if they have, they may have forgotten it's contents, not agreed with it, or simply decided to ignore it while pursuing their startup ideas.
Listening to an interview, even one that repeats most of the same advice, can still be beneficial because it is a reinforcement of a lesson that still needs learning and because you may identify better with the Submittable guys as fellow founders after hearing their voice, than with pg as a distant ex-entrepreneur-turned-investor with his more dry prose.
flexxaeon|13 years ago