That flies in the face of conventional thinking, which says ideas are cheap and delivery is everything. Unless conceptually you've figured out such an enormous breakthrough that the solution is literally in your hands right now, you have no competitive edge over anybody, and you're working with a concept simplistic enough a thirteen-year-old could understand it. That's not a good thing, if the concept's all you've got. It means the thirteen-year-olds at Google and Skype have figured it out too.
But you're adept at saying very simple and ugly things with enough words that it sounds almost swallowable. I had to reread what you posted twice to make out what you were saying. Basically, you're admitting that Skype has an alternative that's cheaper and more effective, and that it works perfectly save phone companies don't like it. Your solution is to price gouge the same way phone companies are right now so that people will be tricked into thinking there's a profit. But phrased like that, it sounds more like a concept without an idea, artificially priced at a level beyond its actual value.
I wish you luck not for Avecora but for whatever idea you have after this. The best way to learn quickly is to pursue a wild, failing ambition. Two years from now, if you've learned, you'll have a savvy that's the envy of your peers. Just make sure that for the time being, you're enjoying your work. Then failure really doesn't matter.
But you're adept at saying very simple and ugly things with enough words that it sounds almost swallowable. I had to reread what you posted twice to make out what you were saying. Basically, you're admitting that Skype has an alternative that's cheaper and more effective, and that it works perfectly save phone companies don't like it. Your solution is to price gouge the same way phone companies are right now so that people will be tricked into thinking there's a profit. But phrased like that, it sounds more like a concept without an idea, artificially priced at a level beyond its actual value.
I wish you luck not for Avecora but for whatever idea you have after this. The best way to learn quickly is to pursue a wild, failing ambition. Two years from now, if you've learned, you'll have a savvy that's the envy of your peers. Just make sure that for the time being, you're enjoying your work. Then failure really doesn't matter.