When Work Floods: How to Find Scarcity After AGI
Flavio Aliberti·9 min
From another standpoint, an entrepreneur is just a significantly less stable version of a businessman. In well-established businesses, things become predictable. You make something out of something and trade something into something. Time and effort bring you money. Innovation or any novelty is excluded from this equation.
Businessmen and entrepreneurs operate on the same ground, just entrepreneurship is a less stable one.
It is a good thing to recognize the moment of practicality which is lacking when entrepreneurship becomes nearly fashion-like. To avoid delusion in entrepreneurship, what you need is to realize that entrepreneurship is a practical thing. Practical, risky and hopeful.
Within a delusional state under the seductive influence of ideas, people forget to question how the result of the ideas can be useful, and most importantly - the skill set supporting the idea.
Production, distribution and consumption have their subsets of technical sophistication. Making a product requires some effort. Then making the product available and desired to use.
“All ideas are great but is it useful and can you sell it?” makes the whole thing more sobering.
Entrepreneurs under personal delusion may ignore practical elements to satisfy this cycle. Seeing the summit of the mountain but ignoring the mountain is not a good strategy. Making a product or service is less idealistic than many would think. It definitely requires knowledge and practical skill to make an idea tangible and ready for distribution and use.
Buzz words that revolutionize the industry providing cutting-edge technology to disrupt the current market and change the landscape of how businesses acquire talents - is a beautiful phrasing and also verbose if we judge from a practical standpoint. Recruiting app is what intended to be said.
The moment delusion in entrepreneurial types is recognized, first, by verbosity and, second, by lack of practical grounding. If you are aware of questology as a metaphor for logic, deduction and expansive thinking you will quickly find flaws to disarm entrepreneurial verbosity with nothing in it:
How is it made?
How will it work?
What is the segment of the market you will fulfill?
Who will be your competitors?
Answers require knowledge. If actual knowledge fails to serve as a tool, then delusion has been revealed. Good to know for an entrepreneur before pursuing ideas.
If knowledge does not back up your ideas - you are operating on dangerous ground.
So when it comes to the moment of entrepreneurship and your participation in it you will know that knowledge capital you can rally around will influence the success of your idea. Ideas without connections to any knowledge - welcome to a delusion land.Instantly repurpose any DDI article into a professionally produced short-form video.
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