One thing I’ve noticed while building online is that most people don’t really struggle with ideas.
They struggle with turning messy thoughts into something structured and understandable.
A lot of founders can explain their project perfectly in their head…
but the second they need to write it down clearly for someone else (client, investor, partner, even themselves), everything becomes vague.
I’ve been paying way more attention to this lately.
Not even from a “startup” angle only, but from a human one:
people overcomplicate things
they add too much
they try to sound professional instead of sounding clear
Ironically, the simpler and cleaner something feels, the harder it usually was to build behind the scenes.
Curious if other solo founders noticed the same thing while building products.
This is true, and I think the hard part is that founders often confuse “more complete” with “more clear.”
When the idea is still messy, adding more context feels safer. But for the reader, that usually makes the product harder to understand.
The best test I’ve found is simple: can someone understand the product, the buyer, and the pain in one clean sentence without needing the founder to explain it live?
If not, the problem usually is not the idea. It is the translation layer between the founder’s thinking and the market’s understanding.
That layer matters a lot for landing pages, cold outreach, investor intros, and even basic product feedback.