How to Find Build-Worthy Ideas
Hi again đ This blog is a part of the Intro â Build What You Imagine Series. Feel free to check out…

¡ 4 min read
Hi again đ
This blog is a part of the Intro â Build What You Imagine Series. Feel free to check out other parts and learn along the way.
đ§ Problem: Finding Project Ideas Isnât Hard #
Finding project ideas isnât as difficult as most people think. You’re surrounded by problems every dayâfrom the moment you wake up to when you go to bed.
Let me give you a few personal examples:
I want a product that shows all my notifications in one place when I wake up.
A plugin that can auto-generate a to-do list and show yesterdayâs journal in Obsidian.
An app where I can save my thoughts, and then ask AI to summarize how my day was.
A simple util app to use my phone as a PC mic.
These are tiny daily pain points. Some already have solutions, but theyâre either filled with ads, not customizable, or need me to share personal dataâwhich Iâm not comfortable with. If the tool were open-source or self-hostable, Iâd try it. But in many cases, they simply donât exist.
So, whatâs the alternative?
Build these apps yourself.
Yes, seriously. Just like I noticed these small gaps, you have them too. Youâve probably caught yourself thinking, âThis app should really have this one extra featureâŚâ
And then maybe you thought: âI can build this.â
Thatâs the moment you grab onto. These small ideas may not make you money, but they teach you a lot, sharpen your skills, and if you solve your own problem wellâyou now have something to show off with pride.
đ¸ I Have an Idea. Can I Make Money From It? #
Great! Youâve found an idea youâre excited to build. But now youâre wonderingâ
Can I earn money from it?
The short answer?
You can. But donât think about money right now.
If your first goal is money, your focus shifts away from building.
If you chase money first, youâll likely get neither skills nor money.
Letâs be clearâbuilding projects is an art, not just business.
Iâm not saying you shouldnât aim to monetize. But before that, build the skills. If you can solve a couple of personal problems and youâre happy using your own product, then itâs ready for the world.
Share it online. Launch it on Product Hunt or LinkedIn.
Youâll always find people who share the same problemâand if they love it, youâll naturally find a way to monetize.
đ¨âđť Do You Really Want to Be a Developer? #
If youâre a beginner, especially someone who picked computer science just for the moneyâthereâs a hard truth:
Youâll likely struggle if you’re not motivated by curiosity.
CS and development require patience, persistence, and a desire to create.
If your initial goal is only income, youâll burn out fast.
So, what should you do?
Build for fun.
Build to learn.
Make anything:
Websites
Mobile apps
CLI tools
Games
Math animations
3D models
A unified chat app that runs in your terminal and on your phone
Your own cloud console
đ The sky is the limit.
Ideas are everywhereâmost people just ignore them. Builders donât.
The key is to start building and keep building. If you document your journey online, youâll open doors: internships, jobs, freelance gigs, and more.
Build for skill first.
Money is a byproduct.
âď¸ Whatâs Next? #
By now, youâve probably got a few ideas floating in your head. Hereâs what to do next:
Write your ideas down.
Yes, physicallyâpen and paper. Donât use AI yet.Define the problem each idea solves.
Resist jumping to AI to ask how to build it. Why?
Because AI can overwhelm you and show you someone elseâs way of doing it.
Your idea is unique. Youâre solving a personal problem.Avoid instant setups or templates.
Youâll end up copy-pasting without understanding the core.Keep it simple.
Donât overengineer. Solve just 2 small problems. Keep the scope tight and clear.
Later in this series, Iâll show you how to use AI productively during the build phase. But not now. First, learn to think, break down problems, and structure your ideas yourself.
đ§ž Conclusion #
The goal of this post was to help you:
Find build-worthy ideas
Get excited about building
Let go of the money-first mindset (for now)
Building something just for yourself, even if no one else uses it, is worth it.
You learn. You grow. You create.
Weâll get into execution and building in future posts.
For now, grab a notebook, look around you, and start writing your ideas.
Thatâs it for today.
Thanks for reading.
â Priyanshu Verma