Want to Disrupt an Entire Industry? Here Are 3 Tips From the Future.OK, I'm not actually from the future. But, I'm here to help you with yours.

ByJake Epstein

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

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My Rocketbook co-founder Joe Lemay and I appear in videos wearing orange space suits and say we make reusable notebooks "from the future." Let me get this out of the way right now: We're notactuallyfrom the future. But, I do know how you're going to start a disruptive company of your own -- by looking inthe past.

Related:Amazon's Lesson About Disruption: Rattle Any Market You Can

I don't need to tell you that starting any company is hard work. If you're reading this then you have probably read a dozen articles about that. But in reality, most companies enter an industry with some modest improvement to an existing product, which happens to be an expensive grind, and quite frankly, boring. Disrupting an industry costs less, erects a barrier to entry and is way more fun. So, how will you do it? Enter the startup time machine and read on!

Tip 1: Break the rules.

Throw away the directions. Ignore the "experts." Don't ask permission.

Think of some of the big disruptive companies of our era. BothUberandAirbnbare locked in a never-ending battle against city ordinances, unions and regulations. And I'm still not sure howDraftKingsis legal, but it actually is. More recently, angry mobs have been literally setting stacks ofBirdscooters on fire. Before these companies succeeded, most experts would have given them one hundred reasons why their success was impossible.

Rocketbook waslaughed off ofShark Tankbecause a reusable notebook was "so stupid." Another venture capitalist told us to pivot to a SaaS company if we "want to survive." And a notebook company executive thought we "had a place in gift shops as a novelty item." How did we respond? We barged into a major retailer wearing space suits to shoot our first commercial (and then we were asked to leave and never come back).

Today, that same retailer is one of our top sellers. We've also managed to become the No. 1 selling notebook onAmazonand have sold over 1.5 million Rocketbooks. So, if you ask me, when it comes to disruption, there are no experts and nobodyactuallyknows what they're talking about.

Don't get me wrong, you need to start with a useful idea. But, when you think you have it, don't hold back. Take the core concept and turn up the crazy dial to the highest volume. When the neighbors call the cops -- you're onto something.

Related:5 Habits That Made Elon Musk an Innovator

Tip 2: Move faster and break everything.

You've probably heard the old Silicon Valley chestnut "move fast and break things." That's good advice for established companies methodically running iterations on an existing product. Movefasterand breakeverythingis better advice for launching a new company.

You know how in every action movie, the hero gets away by smashing his car through intersections, alleys and farmers markets? Same idea. The car is the product. You are the hero. And your safety is in no way guaranteed.

Speed is paramount when launching something truly disruptive. Not because of competition -- there is none -- but because you're probably going to hit walls. So, you'll need enough speed to crash right through them. By the time someone is saying, "Geez that business model sounds a bit risky," you have a thousand customers texting their friends about the hottest new thing.

The ultimate example of speed for Rocketbook was crowdfunding, where we've raised over $6 million across a handful of campaigns. There, you're not even launching a product per se; you're funding a concept with a great video and hoping your customers' excitement in your idea transcends the product details -- or in some cases, even the existence of an actual product.

Related:The 100 Most Brilliant Business Ideas

Tip 3: Break the rules.

Wait a second, isn't that Tip 1? Well, they told me readers like lists of three or 10, so I used one of them twice. See that's my point! "Rules of thumb" get in your way. So let's get back to breaking the rules ...

The first Rocketbook notebook we ever launched erases by putting it in the microwave. Can you imagine how many fires we set trying to figure that one out? (Answer: six.) However, the Rocketbook Wave continues to crush it on Amazon. Why? Because it's awesome and everyone says it's crazy.

I'm notfromthe future, but I've seenyourfuture. You'll take that idea bouncing around in your head and intentionally turn up the crazy dial. You'll ignore "expert" opinions and guidelines. You'll drive extremely fast, take incredible chances, and smash through walls. You will succeed in the future where nobody in your past thought it was possible. And when you get there? Look for a couple nerds in orange space suits.

Wavy Line
Jake Epstein

Co-Founder of Rocketbook

Jake Epstein is the co-founder of Rocketbook, creator of reusable, cloud-connected notebooks. Epstein holds a B.S. in electrical and computer engineering from Purdue University.

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