Therea4ぎa4г a good chance that youa4ぎa4ёe had some random product ideas throughout your life. Like, a4ぎABoy, it would be great if there was a tortilla chip that didna4ぎa4д get soggy when you put salsa on ita4ぎ But unless youa4ぎa4вe a startup CEO (and hey, maybe even if you are), you probably haven&'t done anything with those ideas.

A new company called Ahhha wants to change that. The goal is to take all those random idea and crowdsource the process of turning them into designs and products that you can actually make money from. People enter their ideas into the website, then other users can weigh in, voting ideas up or down and also contributing their own thoughts. In the tortilla example, someone could say, a4ぎAMan, I would totally buy that!a4ぎ and endorse the idea, or a food chemist might offer some ideas about the possible ingredients.

At a certain point, the most popular ideas will be refined to the the point that theya4ぎa4вe monetizable. Or they might need a final push, so Ahhha might hold a contest where users could join up in teams to create the final product. Then Ahhha will try to actually sell it, either by licensing it to another company (which seems more plausible, at least at first) or even starting a new business.

The money made from the product or licensing deal is then split among Ahhha users based on a set terms. The idea originator gets 1 percent, then the remaining 99 percent is divided among Ahhha and the other contributors, depending on how much the users actually did.

Of course, 1 percent of a licensing deal might seem like an awfully small payment for your idea, but founder and chief executive Matthew Crowe likes to repeat the common Silicon Valley wisdom that ideas are cheap, while execution is what counts. Or, as Thomas Edison put it, genius is a4ぎA1 percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration.a4ぎ After all, 1 percent of a real product is better than 100 percent of a daydream that doesna4ぎa4д go anywhere.

After talking to Crowe, it also seems like the best way to use Ahhha is to have a stake in a number of ideas, some that you came up with and some that you contributed to, so that youa4ぎa4вe not too invested in any one product.

a4ぎAIf this is your one great idea that youa4ぎa4вe convinced you&'re going to make your fortune from, then go do that, I dona4ぎa4д want it,a4ぎ Crowe said.

Ahhha can make money in three ways, he added. First by licensing or selling the products developed through the site. Second by selling a customizable version to companies who want to crowdsource product development with their customers. (This sounds similar to products like Spigit, but Crowe said most of those idea voting products are focused on employees, not customers. Plus, Ahhha has developed a technology for weighting different votes and contributions, and also for determining when a product is ready to monetize.) Finally, Ahhha can also sell services to entrepreneurs who want to turn their ideas into products.

For some readers, the concept may sound like a patent troll in disguise, as former Microsoft chief technology officer Nathan Myhrvold&'s Intellectual Ventures has been accused of. But Crowe was emphatic that he has no interest in pursuing that kind of litigious model, even though he does want Ahhha to develop and patent intellectual property.

Crowe said that he has raised funding for the Palo Alto, Calif. company, but that ita4ぎa4г too early to disclose how much or from whom.

Personally, I think ita4ぎa4г a compelling idea and with a lot of potential, but one with a lot of question marks. Its success will depend on the companya4ぎa4г ability to convince users to share their ideas, and on its ability to separate the good ideas from the random ones (current ideas in the system include a4ぎAwarp drivea4ぎ and a4ぎAtime machinea4ぎ).

Ahhha is slowly letting users onto the site. VentureBeat readers can get in by visiting this page and entering the code a4ぎAedisona4ぎ.

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Companies: Ahhha

People: Matthew Crowe

Companies: Ahhha

People: Matthew Crowe

Anthony is a senior editor at VentureBeat, as well as its reporter on media, advertising, and social networks. Before joining the site in 2008, Anthony worked at the Hollister Free Lance, where he won awards from the California Newspaper Publishers Association for breaking news coverage and writing. He attended Stanford University and now lives in San Francisco. Reach him at anthony@venturebeat.com. (All story pitches should also be sent to tips@venturebeat.com) You can also follow Anthony on Twitter.

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