For example, here I am. I have my big 'idea' and I also have plenty of related experience that I think will see it brought to life but what I'm lacking is capital.
Meanwhile there's my big competitor, they also have the experience and have huge capital - but what are they doing with it? Nothing. Because they haven't had the idea yet.
I read that statement yesterday and had a shoofti at your website and at the websites of other couriers and then it struck me -
yes, I had an idea!
WOW!
Now what do I do? I'm not a courier and I have no experience and I am certainly not going to spread any bread on some idea in an industry I know nothing about. I don't even know enough to evaluate the idea. The closest I get to the courier trade, is the bloke who comes to pick up and drop off stuff - and of course the mail man.
My idea was for a click-and-collect just for businesses. The plumber, the taxi driver, white van man all need to get deliveries too, but they do not have an office that is open until 6pm to take deliveries, so they waste their time, casing parcels needlessly.
A B2B click-n-collect service.
One local franchise gets a small fee for having the stuff there, instead of wasting diesel and time, having some poor bloke schlepping all over a town, looking for a tiny business that will not be home anyway!
The more I thought about my idea, the more I liked it.
But then beer o'clock struck and I began to develop other ideas! A wooden microphone, a passive 5.1 volume controller, a music school, a film about a prostitute who reeks revenge on all the men who have abused her, an alpaca farm and of course a micro-brewery. As I got deeper into the bevvies, that last one began to look ever-more appealing!
Ideas are ten-a-penny! Or as the old song goes "It ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it!"