What's the fastest way to validate a product idea?
Emon makhmudov
9 replies
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Ash G@ash_grover
1. Look for existing competitors. If they exist, your idea is validated.
2. Identify a problem you have. If your solution solves that pain point, it likely helps others too. Look on social channels to see if people are discussing similar pain points.
3. If there's interest on social media, create a landing page for your product. Share it in those channels to gauge interest.
4. Directly message potential customers to ask if your product addresses their pain points.
5. Build an MVP with essential features. Reach out to potential customers for feedback. If any express interest and become paying users, your idea is validated.
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Launch it and gauge people's reaction?
Build MVP which is as simple as possible (postpone infra, UX, architecture work) and get first paying customer.
Launching soon!
Develop a basic version of your product that includes only the core features. This allows you to test the concept without a full-scale launch. Then gather feedback from potential customers through surveys or interviews to understand their needs and pain points.
How about posting a thread to test the waters? Don't rush to develop your product yet; first, ask if there is a demand for it.
Columns
Test interests - collect waitlist and see how far it goes.
Test business - sign up with $1 reserve fee to get notified when product is ready.
disclaimer: the first one works for me, but the second one is just an idea.
Elon Jump
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I think is to validate a product idea is to talk to potential customers directly. Set up quick interviews or surveys to understand their pain points and see if your solution resonates with them. Nothing beats direct feedback from real users.
Absolutely, building a super simple MVP and landing that first paying customer is key. Cut corners on the non-essentials at first (slick UX, scalable infra, elegant architecture) and just get something functional in users' hands ASAP to start validating the core idea and gathering real feedback. Refine from there once you know you're heading in the right direction.