Pattern Breakers: How to Find Billion-Dollar Startup Ideas
Mike Maples Jr
Founder, Floodgate; Author, Pattern Breakers
20+ YEARS INVESTING
The Framework
The Three Powers of Breakthrough Ideas
"Business is never a fair fight. What inflections let the founder do is wage asymmetric warfare on the present."
Breakthrough ideas need underlying forces, not just better implementation
80% of biggest investment returns came from pivots—the idea changed
Startups win by denying the premise, not by competing better
Most founders are trying to think of a startup, not living in the future
Power #1: Inflections
External Turning Points That Enable the Impossible
Not an improvement curve—it's a turning point where something new becomes possible
External to any startup—you don't create it, you find it
Unlocks new empowerment—enables something that wasn't possible before
Has a window—too early and it doesn't exist, too late and it's obvious
Real examplesGPS in iPhone 4s → enabled Lyft, Instacart, DoorDash Better phone cameras → enabled Instagram ChatGPT interface → unlocked AI for the masses
The insightYou could have had the ride-sharing idea before iPhone GPS, but it wouldn't have worked. The technology had to be ready first.
Powers #2 & #3
Insights + Founder-Future Fit
Insights
How to weaponize the inflection
Same inflection, different insights = different companies. Lyft, DoorDash, and Instacart all used the GPS chip, but each founder saw a different future and built differently.
The question: What does this inflection let me build that the world doesn't know it needs yet?
Founder-Future Fit
Why some founders see it first
"Who knows the most about this future? Who has intrinsic motivation? Who has the best network in this ecosystem?"
Todd McKinnon (Okta) had Salesforce credibility. Applied Intuition founders had deep autonomous vehicle knowledge. Lighthouse customers + authentic passion = credibility.
"Louis Pasteur said, chance favors the prepared mind. A prepared mind attracts luck because it's positioned to notice breakthroughs that others miss."
It's not about a better idea—it's about the founder's authentic preparation
Your background, your network, even how you look matters—it's about credibility fit
Product-market fit is the game; founder-future fit is the head start
Getting It Right
How to Get Out of the Present
Live in the future: Spend time where the future already exists—cutting-edge labs, forward-thinking companies, leading-edge customers
Find lighthouse customers: Customers so far ahead they're pulling you toward the future. Solve for them, everyone else follows
Build what you wish existed: If you can't find a lighthouse customer, build what's missing for yourself (Andreessen, Zuckerberg, Jobs)
Become a future tourist: Like Maddie Hall following Sam Altman—sample multiple futures until one resonates with your authentic passion
The hard truth"If you're not living in the future, your opinion about it isn't valid." Your intuition about what to build is only right if you're already there experiencing it.
Contrarian
What Most Founders Get Wrong
✗Better execution beats better ideasINSTEAD →✓ Better is an extension of the present. Startups win by proposing a radically different future that disorganizes incumbents.
✗Just follow the playbookINSTEAD →✓ The best founders don't follow the business model canvas or customer development dogma. They break the pattern.
✗Try to think of a startup ideaINSTEAD →✓ Live in the future and notice what's missing. Your intuition about what to build comes from experience, not brainstorming.
✗Pick a problem to solve firstINSTEAD →✓ Pick a future to live in first. The problems in that future are the ones only you can see and solve.