I spent 20 years on the other side of the table, evaluating startup ideas inside an accelerator. Most of the time, the idea itself wasn't the problem — it just wasn't ready yet. Founders hadn't thought through the right things: who the product is really for, what to test first, what an investor would actually push back on.
Over time I realized the hardest and most critical stage is shaping an idea until it actually holds real business value in the market — not just "an idea," but something with a defined edge. Getting there requires three things:
I built StartZig around exactly these three pieces, so every founder gets this guidance directly, without needing to get into an accelerator first.
What StartZig does:
By the end of the journey, you land on a beta invite page — already populated with the users you gathered along the way — and you can invite additional founders straight from StartZig's own community
It's free. If it helps someone take that first step instead of staying stuck at "I don't know where to start," that's enough for me.
🔗 www.startzig.com
Would love your honest take:
If you're pre-idea or early-stage, would something like this actually get you unstuck, or is the real blocker something else entirely?
What's the one thing you wish someone had walked you through before you built your first version?
I like the focus on validating and refining ideas before jumping into development.
Many startups fail because they build too early instead of confirming there's a real problem to solve.
Curious what part of the idea validation process users find most valuable in StartZig.
We actually just launched, so I'm eager to hear real feedback to keep improving the experience. The system takes founders through a structured journey — shaping the business model, moving from MVP to MLP and beyond — with a real emphasis on precisely defining the idea itself before anything gets built, alongside a mockup tool so you can actually visualize it.
The other piece is that most founders in the early stages aren't going through this alone — they've got an AI mentor helping at every step, plus feedback from the community along the way.
Toward the end of the journey, founders can use a tool that generates a professional business plan, along with a polished beta signup page, and invite other users to join.