Would You Pay $5000 for an MVP Development Service? Seeking Feedback on My Idea
Kervan ASLAN
3 replies
Hi everyone,
I’m working on a service called 5kmvp, where we help entrepreneurs and businesses get their ideas turned into functional MVPs (Minimum Viable Products) for just $5000. Before I dive deeper into building the platform, I wanted to get some feedback on whether this idea would actually work.
The Process:
Here’s how it would work:
Customers visit our website and pay $5000.
Within 2 days, we’ll create a roadmap for the product based on online meetings to understand what they want.
We’ll build the product, test it, deploy it to their servers with in 2 weeks, and make sure it’s up and running.
After delivery, we’ll offer a 1-month bug-fix period where we’ll fix any issues that come up.
The Question:
I’m curious to know if people would be willing to pay $5000 for an MVP development service.
Would you trust an online software agency with this kind of money?
Is $5000 a reasonable price for an MVP? If you don't why and what can we do about that?
Background:
We’re a software consultancy that has worked with companies like Bosch, Buderus, Mercedes, Deutsche Bank and etc.. providing expert software solutions. Our team has a lot of experience in developing high-quality products quickly, and now we want to apply this experience to help potential clients launch their MVPs.
I’m really trying to validate this idea before moving forward, so any feedback would be appreciated!
Thanks in advance!
Replies
Jessica Young@jessicayoungq
$5000 does seem quite low for a fully developed MVP. Quality could be a concern with such a limited budget and timeline. I'd suggest starting with a very narrow scope and lean MVP to validate the core idea first before investing more. Also consider using no-code tools and AI assistants to help build faster and cheaper prototypes initially. But for a polished, full-featured MVP, a higher budget is likely needed to ensure solid development and a quality product. Just my 2 cents!
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$5000 feels a bit low for a full MVP. How do you ensure quality in such a short time?
Seems like a solid deal if you can deliver quickly. I would want to know more about the tech stack and scalability.