Introduction
One of the most common mistakes entrepreneurs make is asking others, “Do you think this is a good idea?” It feels safe. It feels validating. But in reality, it often leads to confusion, doubt, and inaction.
The truth is most people can’t accurately judge your idea. And relying on opinions instead of action can slow you down more than help you grow..
Why Opinions Can Mislead You
Not everyone sees your vision the way you do. When you ask for feedback, people respond based on their own experiences, fears, and biases not your market reality.
Some will say it’s great just to be supportive. Others will dismiss it because they don’t understand it. Neither response gives you what you actually need.
Validate with Action, Not Opinions
Instead of asking for approval, test your idea in the real world. Build something small, launch early, and observe how people respond.
Focus on Real Users
Your target audience matters more than random opinions. Listen to potential customers their behavior tells you more than words ever will.
Learn Through Feedback, Not Validation
Don’t ask if your idea is good. Ask how it can be better. Shift from seeking approval to seeking improvement.
Build Confidence Through Execution
Confidence doesn’t come from hearing “this is a great idea.” It comes from taking action, learning fast, and improving along the way. The more you test, fail, adjust, and grow the clearer your path becomes.
“Your idea doesn’t need approval. It needs proof.”
Conclusion
Your business idea will never feel perfect, and that’s okay. What matters is not how many people approve of it but how well it performs in the real world. Stop asking for permission. Start building, testing, and learning.