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Ideas have their own appareance in our minds, some of them are good and some bad. In order to stick with a bad idea, you need to follow the next steps:
  1. Context: You see something is broken or bad and make some kind of analysis trying to stipulate all the angles. Sometimes also, you think is wrong but it isn't.
  2. Opportunity: You have information or a mix of information that presents to you as a tool to fix the problem you saw.
  3. Idea: You are thinking how to use this new tool in the problem above.
  4. Exploration: Analyzing everything, you see things as it may end, probably in a positive way since your idea helped to solve the issue per se.
  5. Evaluation: When you make the evaluation of your project, the data in the screen tells you that the problem wasn't solved.
  6. Denial: Something in your evaluation didn't work out, not the job per se. You start making double-check in every step and it's not your fault, someone else have.
  7. Bargain: This is the step where you realize that the problem is not what you expected, it was already solved and you're trying to re-define something that's working.
  8. Finally, consequences are accepted and lessons are learned.
Most people are now between six and seven and see every bad idea as such. I think bad ideas worth more than a 1000$ course or training but some people seems to be no-friendly to these.
Bad ideas are good in the end if you get to step 8, bad ideas are bad if you stuck in steps ~6-7