Having a killer idea is great, but that's just the first step. Turning that spark into a flame requires hustle. There will be setbacks, moments where you want to throw in the towel, but that's when hard work separates the dreamers from the doers.
Most successful people have a graveyard of failed ideas in their past. But guess what? They learned from those flops and came back stronger. The key isn't to avoid failing entirely, but to use those experiences to level up your game.
Ideas on head or on paper looks so real and realistic until they are put into action, that's when you know that there is more to what you dealing with. Idea will look rich that you can put it into work instantly but as soon as you launch that work and you have not experienced it before, you will see the actual factors that you didn't see even before starting the business.
People do have money, they have millions in their bank account but are afraid of what will happen if use the money for business because most of the business startup usually fail in their first start. I have seen more than 100 of business that change idea and rebrand into different things. Nokia first product was a toilet paper before they later change into phone business and that was one of the biggest business idea the ever succeeded into but along the way, they allowed another competitor to snap them out of the business, that was Blackberry. However, launch of Android phones killed all Java phones, you can see that running a successful business is not for the weak, you need to be ahead of everyone.
So, you have millions in your account but are petrified by what ifs. Apprehensible, but isn't it prudence disguised as fear? Nokia went from toilet paper to tech giant, but without planning, it was overthrown. Being ahead requires adaptability and tenacity. Failure is inevitable and predictable
Business is for visionaries who can handle uncertainty. It need vision and courage to pivot, rebrand, fail, and rise again. Each giant today failed once. Can you afford not to use your millions? Not the risk