Before You Build an MVP, Do This One Crucial Thing
How many times have you heard this phrase in startup or corporate innovation meetings? “We need to build an MVP!” 🚀 Sounds proactive, right? But here’s a hard truth:
Jumping straight into building an MVP is like sprinting into a fog—you don’t know where you’re going, and you’ll probably hit a wall.
Smart founders don’t start by building an MVP. They start by validating the problem. Without that, you’re essentially gambling with your time, money, and energy.
- The “Blind Build” Trap:
- Most startups rush to build something tangible—fast.
- But without real problem validation, you end up guessing what customers want, leading to wasted resources.
- Result: a fast-forward failure.
- MVP Chaos—What Actually Happens:
- Building an MVP before validation means ballooning costs, unclear direction, and endless iterations.
- It’s a recipe for burning out before you even get real traction.
- The Psychological Trap of MVP Failure:
- Imagine launching your MVP and hearing crickets.
- Was it the wrong problem?
- Was it a bad solution?
- Without validation, you’ll never know. The confusion can be fatal.
- The Smarter Way—Validate First:
- Before touching a single line of code, test your problem hypothesis.
- Use quick, low-cost experiments like:
- Landing pages
- Demo videos (Ă la Dropbox)
- Customer interviews
- Only when you have proof of real demand should you move on to building an MVP.
- Real-Life Example—Dropbox:
- Dropbox didn’t build before they validated.
- They used a simple explainer video, which went viral and got them 75k signups in one night—proof of demand without writing a single line of code.
Building an MVP too soon is not just risky—it’s often startup suicide. Instead, validate your problem first, build second, and give yourself a fighting chance at success.
💡 Let’s build smarter. Have you seen startups fall into the MVP trap before? Drop your thoughts below!
Try derisky.ai to validate your problem first.