Explore Paul Graham’s guide to startup ideas. Learn why the best companies are noticed rather than invented and how to avoid the trap of sitcom startup ideas.

The best way to get startup ideas is not to try to think of startup ideas, but to live in the future and build what seems missing.
This lesson is part of the learning plan: 'The Paul Graham Guide to Startup Ideas'. Lesson topic: Living in the Future Overview: Most founders fail by trying to invent ideas from scratch. By living at the edge of change, you'll naturally notice the gaps that become huge companies. Key insights to cover in order: 1. The most successful startups are noticed rather than invented because they solve problems the founders personally encountered while living at the leading edge. 2. Living in the future means becoming an expert user or creator in a rapidly changing field where gaps in the world become obvious. 3. You can ratchet yourself into the future by working on hard projects driven by curiosity rather than trying to learn entrepreneurship in the abstract. Listener profile: - Learning goal: generate 7 podcast episodes distilling Paul Graham's best thinking on how to find and evaluate startup ideas - Background knowledge: I have extensive knowledge of Paul Graham's content including his ~230 essays on paulgraham.com, his books (On Lisp, ANSI Common Lisp, Hackers & Painters), talks at Stanford and YC Startup School, major podcast interviews, and his Twitter content. I'm familiar with his signature writing style and core mental models like 'live in the future and build what's missing,' organic vs. made-up ideas, schlep blindness, and founder/market fit. - Guidance: Structure episodes around PG's key frameworks for startup idea generation and evaluation. Focus on concrete examples and counterintuitive insights from his essays and talks, maintaining his conversational style throughout. Tailor examples, pacing, and depth to this listener. Avoid analogies or references that assume knowledge outside this listener's profile.








Living in the future is a core concept in Paul Graham's guide to startup ideas. It suggests that the most successful entrepreneurs don't force themselves to invent new concepts in a vacuum. Instead, they exist at the leading edge of a field where they naturally notice problems that don't have solutions yet. By living in the future, founders identify genuine needs that others haven't seen, allowing them to build products that people actually want rather than forcing a made-up idea.
Sitcom startup ideas are what Paul Graham calls 'made-up' ideas that sound plausible but lack real-world demand. These are the types of concepts a TV writer might create for a character because they seem like they should work, such as a social network for pet owners. While these ideas sound reasonable on the surface, they often fail because the founders are straining to come up with a million-dollar idea rather than solving a problem they have personally encountered.
According to the Living in the Future podcast, the most successful startups like Google or Facebook aren't really invented through sheer willpower. Instead, they are noticed by founders who are paying attention to the world around them. This counterintuitive shift suggests that instead of sitting in a dark room trying to brainstorm a genius concept, entrepreneurs should focus on identifying gaps and problems they personally experience. This approach leads to authentic insights and better product-market fit.
Noticing an idea is superior to inventing one because it ensures the problem being solved is real. When founders try to invent an idea, they often end up with bad ideas that no one actually needs. By noticing a problem, particularly one the founder personally experiences, they ensure there is a genuine use case. This organic discovery process is a superpower in entrepreneurship that helps avoid the common trap of building something that sounds good but fails to gain traction.
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