Here’s How You Make the Most Money With $5 and 2 Hours

Via Hacker News we have this video out of the Stanford technology venture program.

****** Spoiler (also from hacker news) ******

She teaches a class at Stanford and offers each team $5 of ‘funding’ in an envelope. She tells them that once they open the envelope, they have 2 hours to make as much money as they can.

She cites three teams’ approaches:

1) First team opens a free stand that offers to check peoples bike tire pressure for free, then charges $1 to inflate if necessary. This team changes midstream to accepting donations instead of charging, and makes more money. Lauded for rapid iteration.

2) Second team makes lots of reservations at local restaurants, and then sells them to people waiting in line for same restaurant. Didn’t use the $5 at all. Lauded for realizing that the $5 constraint was artificial, and that using it constrained their thinking.

3) Third team skipped the exercise, and sold their 3 minute class presentation time as a advertisement to a local company. Made the most money. Instead of presenting, they recruited. Lauded for realizing that the 2 hours was also artificially hampering their thinking.

She hands out two artificial constraints, and then praises the teams who ignore the constraints. “Thinking outside the box” is a great skill and all, but basically all these teams are doing is finding creative ways of breaking the rules. It means the puzzle isn’t “make the most money in 2 hours with $5″, it means the puzzle is “find out how far you can stretch these rules without being disqualified”.

Ignore the rules that don’t matter. Is that something holding you back real? or is it just in your head?

What artificial constraints will you chose to ignore today?

Our only limits are in our minds.

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One Response to “Here’s How You Make the Most Money With $5 and 2 Hours”

  1. birzu.sergiu says:

    Well said. We are taught this way and must break the cycle if we are ever going to be successful at what we want to do. Self limitations are probably our worst enemy.