They spend months developing features customers will never use. An MVP solves that.
A perfect product no one has seen isn't better than an imperfect one people actually use.
An MVP forces you to focus on the one problem the customer is really trying to solve.
Without launching an MVP, you have no real feedback. Just assumptions.
An MVP isn't a discount on development. It's an agreement to build only what validates the business hypothesis — and we fine-tune the rest once we have real data from the first paying customers.
Discovery, customer interviews, and wireframe testing. The cheapest pivot is the one we make before the first line of code.
„Would you pay €19/mo for this?"
From idea to your first paying customers in weeks, not years.
Weekly sprints, a demo on Friday, metrics on Monday. Data decides the next step — not the founder's hunches.
A cutting-board approach: what can we strip out of the first version? Every feature must have a clear reason why it has to be done by launch.
A working product, pitch deck materials, and traction metrics. Ready for a seed round, an accelerator, or a grant application.
We define the core problem, the target audience, and the minimum viable feature set. No unnecessary features.
Fast, iterative development. Every week you see progress and approve the next step.
You get a working product, your first users, and the data to decide: scale or pivot.
If so, an MVP in 10 days is the right next step for your startup.
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