Waiting for the perfect idea feels responsible. It feels like preparation. It feels smarter than acting too soon.
But perfection is one of the easiest ways to stay stuck.
Most useful ideas do not begin as finished ideas. They begin as rough thoughts, simple observations, and imperfect attempts. They get stronger once they are tested in the real world.
If you are at the beginning, stop asking whether the idea is perfect. Ask whether it is clear enough to explain in one sentence and small enough to try in one simple way.
That could mean talking to one person, sketching a basic offer, putting one paragraph on a page, or writing a short note about the problem you want to solve.
Business momentum rarely begins with certainty. It begins with movement.
Start with what you have. Then improve what proves itself.