Solve Problems people are willing to pay for
This week, I found myself in a debate with a friend.
Her view was simple:
“As an entrepreneur, focus on solving problems. The money will come.”
My response was slightly different:
“You need to focus on both—the problem and the money.”
And after reflecting on it, I realized something important:
👉 We were both right—but incomplete.
The Missing Link in Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship is often misunderstood.
Some people focus only on problems.
Others focus only on money.
But real entrepreneurship happens at the intersection of both:
👉 Solving a problem people are willing to pay for.
Why Solving a Problem Is Not Enough
There are many problems in the world:
- Traffic
- Unemployment
- Poor infrastructure
- Inefficiency in systems
But here’s the reality:
👉 Not every problem is a business opportunity.
Why?
Because not every problem has:
- A clear customer
- A willing payer
- A viable business model
You can solve a real problem—and still fail to build a business.
Where Creativity and Innovation Come In
This is where two key entrepreneurial traits matter:
👉 Creativity and innovation
Creativity helps you:
- See problems others overlook
- Understand them from a different angle
Innovation helps you:
- Design solutions that are practical
- Deliver them in ways people value
But more importantly:
👉 These traits help you identify problems that people are actually willing to pay to solve.
Because the goal is not just to find any problem—
It is to find the right problem.
Why Money Alone Is Not Enough
On the other hand, chasing money without solving a real problem leads to:
- Weak products
- Short-term gains
- No customer loyalty
Because money follows value.
👉 No value = no sustainable money
Business vs Charity: A Clear Distinction
If your goal is purely to solve problems—without thinking about money—
then you are not building a business.
👉 You are building a charity.
And there is nothing wrong with that.
Charities play a critical role in society.
But entrepreneurship is different.
Entrepreneurship requires:
👉 Sustainable value creation—where solving a problem generates income
The Entrepreneur’s Sweet Spot
The real work of an entrepreneur is to find:
👉 A problem that is painful enough
👉 A solution that is valuable enough
👉 A customer who is willing to pay
That is where businesses are built.
A Practical Way to Think About It
Before you pursue an idea, ask:
- Who exactly has this problem?
- How painful is it for them?
- Are they already paying for a solution?
- If not, why would they start now?
These questions will save you time, money, and frustration.
A Simple Truth
👉 Impact without revenue is charity
👉 Revenue without value is not sustainable
Entrepreneurship sits in between:
👉 Sustainable value creation
Final Thought
As an entrepreneur, don’t just aim to solve problems.
👉 Aim to solve problems that people are willing to pay for.
Because that is what turns ideas into businesses.
The question is:
Are you solving a problem… or solving a problem that someone values enough to pay for?