You spent hours learning to work with AI tools. You can code, build apps, set up automations. The tools are ready; the skill is there.
But you're sitting at your desk, the screen is blank, and one question nags at you:
“So… what do I build?”
If that feeling is familiar, know one thing first: your problem isn't a lack of creativity or talent. This paralysis happens to almost everyone who has just gained the power to build. And it has a specific cause.
The core mistake: waiting for the “big idea”
Most people wait for a magic moment — a spark of genius that suddenly drops a complete, brilliant idea into their mind.
But the reality is: that moment almost never comes. And the longer you wait for it, the more you feel “I guess I'm just not the creative type.” That's a trap.
The truth is that good ideas aren't built from inspiration. They come from somewhere much more ordinary:
A problem. Something that genuinely bothers people.
Every product you love right now solved someone's problem — it didn't start from a brilliant idea.
The exercise: “problem hunting”
Instead of sitting down and trying to invent an idea, go hunt for them. Here's how:
- For one week, take notes. Every time something frustrates, slows, or annoys you or the people around you, write it down. It doesn't have to be big.
- At the end of the week, look. Now you have a list. This list is your idea pipeline.
- Pick one — the one that bothers you the most. Because you understand your own problem better than anyone, and your motivation to solve it is real.
Try it right now, in 5 minutes
Write down the last 3 times this week something annoyed you or ate your time — anything: a slow task, a repetitive manual chore, something you lost. Done? Look at those 3. At least one of them is a potential idea. Right now. You didn't see them before because you hadn't labeled them an “idea” — now that you have, you can.
A real example
Say this week you wrote: “Every time I want to plan my day, I get lost between three different apps.”
That's a simple complaint — but it's exactly where an idea is hiding. Now that you know AI, you can build a small personal tool that merges those three into one. You didn't start because you had a big idea; you started because you found a real problem.
The next step
Now you have a method, so you'll never be “out of ideas” again. But a list of problems is just the beginning. The harder next question is:
From this list, which idea is actually worth building? And how do I go from a raw problem to something buildable?
That's exactly what you learn, step by step, in the ARMA ideation course.