I can see electric start being very worth while. Most of the time when you get yourself into one of those situations, you are reacting too late, which causes a lot of scrambling. If the motor decides to be ornery that day, you can get into trouble really fast. As most of these small engines are not fuel injected, it is very easy to flood the engine. Typically happens when you just shut the engine off, but the water temps are cold. You don't know how much the engine has cooled, and it doesn't want to start right away. Do you pull the choke or not? What does it really need? Time you play around, you are drifting ever closer to having a serious issue. At some point, you get very tired of pulling the rope, because you guessed wrong on how much choke. The advantage in that situation is that the electric start will crank the engine fast enough to clear the excess fuel out much quicker than trying to pull it by hand.
Simple plays both ways. Simple operation, or simple to get it started in those questionable situations.
In reality, if you want really simple, I'd be very inclined to look at one of the bigger Torqeedo's, such as a Cruise 2T. Very dependable, lightweight. You can't get anything more simple than a switch.