Informed i’s Weekly Business Insights
FREE weekly newsletter | Sharing knowledge briefs from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES, to keep you ‘relevant’… | Since 2017 | Week 455 | May 29-June 4, 2026 | Archive

What These 3 ‘Accidental’ Startup Stories Reveal About Where the Best Business Ideas Really Come From
By Roy Dekel | Edited by Chelsea Brown | Entrepreneur | May 25, 2026
Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen
2 key takeaways from the article
- Everyone loves the clean version of entrepreneurship. The founder spots a perfect opportunity, builds a strategy, raises money and executes against a master plan that works exactly as expected. That story sounds great in interviews. The reality is usually much messier. A surprising number of great companies were not born from some massive vision. They came from frustration, side projects, failed ideas or founders solving problems directly in front of them. The uncomfortable truth about entrepreneurship is that many great businesses are discovered rather than invented. That distinction matters.
- What connects companies like Airbnb, Slack and Shopify is not luck. It is responsiveness. None of these founders began with perfect certainty. Instead, they paid attention carefully enough to notice where value was naturally emerging. A lot of aspiring founders spend years searching for a billion-dollar idea while ignoring the smaller problems directly in front of them. They believe successful businesses must originate from some profound flash of genius. But in practice, many transformative companies begin with ordinary frustrations. Something feels broken. Something feels inefficient. Something important does not exist yet. The founder builds a solution for themselves and eventually discovers that countless other people need the exact same thing. That closeness to the problem creates clarity. And clarity is often far more valuable than theoretical innovation.
(Copyright lies with the publisher)
Topic: Startups, Entrepreneurship
show moreEveryone loves the clean version of entrepreneurship. The founder spots a perfect opportunity, builds a strategy, raises money and executes against a master plan that works exactly as expected. That story sounds great in interviews. The reality is usually much messier. A surprising number of great companies were not born from some massive vision. They came from frustration, side projects, failed ideas or founders solving problems directly in front of them. The uncomfortable truth about entrepreneurship is that many great businesses are discovered rather than invented. That distinction matters.
Discovery means the founder did not fully know what they were building at first. They experimented, paid attention to what people responded to and uncovered where the real value existed. Some of the largest modern companies started exactly that way.
Airbnb: A temporary solution that became a giant. Airbnb did not begin as an ambitious attempt to reinvent hospitality. It started because the founders were struggling to pay rent. During a crowded design conference in San Francisco, hotels were fully booked, and Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia realized there might be an opportunity sitting inside their apartment. They bought air mattresses, offered guests a place to sleep, included breakfast and created a simple website to make the arrangement feel legitimate. The founders recognized that people were willing to trade the predictability of hotels for experiences that felt more affordable, flexible and personal. More importantly, they understood that trust on the internet could be engineered through design, reviews, photography and user behavior. That insight became the foundation of a company that fundamentally changed global travel.
Slack: The company hidden inside a failure. Slack is one of the clearest examples of accidental discovery in modern business. The founders were originally building an online game through a company called Tiny Speck. Like many startups, the company had a vision, a roadmap and strong conviction about what it wanted to become. The problem was that the game was not working. User growth was disappointing, traction was limited, and the business itself was struggling to justify its existence. But inside the company, the team had built an internal messaging platform to coordinate communication between employees. That tool turned out to be exceptionally effective. It reduced friction, organized conversations cleanly and solved collaboration problems in a way existing workplace software did not. Eventually, the founders faced a difficult realization: The tool they built to support the company was more valuable than the company itself.
Shopify: Built by founders frustrated with existing tools. Shopify also emerged from frustration rather than long-term strategic planning. The founders were attempting to sell snowboarding equipment online, but the ecommerce tools available at the time were deeply limiting. Existing platforms were difficult to customize, technically frustrating and not designed with entrepreneurs in mind. So instead of waiting for someone else to build a better solution, they created one themselves. Initially, the software existed purely to support their own business. But over time, the founders recognized something larger happening beneath the surface. The problem they were experiencing was not unique. Millions of entrepreneurs wanted to build online businesses without fighting complicated software infrastructure every step of the way. That realization transformed Shopify from an internal utility into a platform that reshaped modern ecommerce.
The pattern behind “accidental” companies. What connects companies like Airbnb, Slack and Shopify is not luck. It is responsiveness. None of these founders began with perfect certainty. Instead, they paid attention carefully enough to notice where value was naturally emerging. A lot of aspiring founders spend years searching for a billion-dollar idea while ignoring the smaller problems directly in front of them. They believe successful businesses must originate from some profound flash of genius. But in practice, many transformative companies begin with ordinary frustrations. Something feels broken. Something feels inefficient. Something important does not exist yet. The founder builds a solution for themselves and eventually discovers that countless other people need the exact same thing. That closeness to the problem creates clarity. And clarity is often far more valuable than theoretical innovation.
Entrepreneurship is usually a process of discovery. One of the biggest misconceptions about startups is the belief that founders are supposed to know exactly where they are going from the beginning. Most do not. The early stages of building a company are often defined by uncertainty, wrong assumptions and constant adjustment. The founders who survive are rarely the ones with the most polished plans. They are the ones capable of learning the fastest.
show less
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.