How to Find Your Next Big Idea Hiding on the Internet
'A16z Podcast' host Steph Smithβs masterclass in validating business ideas
February 13, 2024 Β· Updated January 25, 2026
Sponsored By: Gamma
TL;DR: Today weβre releasing a new episode of our podcast How Do You Use ChatGPT? I go in depth with Steph Smith, a16z Podcast host, online creator, and queen of internet rabbit holes. As we talk, we vet two business ideas live on the show using a suite of online tools and strategies. Watch on X or YouTube, or listen on Spotify or Apple Podcasts.
The next big idea is hiding in plain sight. Itβs right here, scattered across the internet in incoherent fragments. Steph Smith, my guest for this episode, knows how to connect the dots.
Steph Smith is a prolific online creator, host of the a16z Podcast, author of a book about building a successful blog called Doing Content Right, and creator of Internet Pipes, a toolkit to surface useful insights on the internet.Β
I sat down with Steph to explore the internet through her curious, data-driven eyes. You might think she has an uncanny knack for spotting trends online, but I discover that thereβs a method to her approach. Steph also reveals the internetβs most underrated advantage: validating business ideas cheaply and quickly. Figuring out if an idea is worth it before going all-in is a huge unlock for creative minds everywhere. As we talk, I pitch Steph two businesses, and we use an arsenal of tools and strategies to vet them live on the show.Β
This episode is a must-watch for anyone who spends time online and wants to make money on the internet. Hereβs a taste:
- ChatGPT for idea generation. Steph leverages ChatGPT to brainstorm workable ideas around stuff sheβs thinking aboutβshe recently used an icebreaker it suggested at a meetup she was hosting. β[C]hatGPT is really good at helping me extrapolate from a base,β Steph says.
- Collecting information curated for you. ChatGPT helps Steph come up with new ideas and βfillβ[s] them in with details by pulling information from different places to answer her queries. β[C]hatGPT questions are the ones where you're like, βI actually don't think this exists explicitly like this on Google,ββ she says.
- Presenting information in a way that resonates. Steph not only collects, but also understands, information via ChatGPT. β[T]his program can take something very complex and usher it back down and also the other way βround,β she saysβlike explaining dark matter in the voice of Spongebob.
- ChatGPT as a sparring partner. ChatGPT informs Stephβs opinions by showing her the βother sideβ of a debateβespecially when βI have a strong opinion here, but I also have a feeling I don't know enough about this subject,β she explains.Β
- Organize data with AI. Steph partners with ChatGPT to structure data in useful formats: She got GPT-4 to categorize and format a long list of words for her database of untranslatable words. Steph had to correct a few mistakes, but she explains that βinstead of me doing it myself for six hoursβ¦I could get 90 percent plus there in 15 minutes. Thatβs much better.βΒ
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