Minimum Viable Product (MVP): Why and how to develop it?
May 10, 2025
π Launching a startup is like opening a restaurant. But before renting a huge place and hiring 10 chefs, wouldnβt it be wiser to check if people actually like your food? Thatβs exactly what the Minimum Viable Product (MVP) is about: a simple, functional version of your product to test the market with minimal effort and cost.
π‘ Letβs visualize!
You want to build a revolutionary carpooling app?
π Before coding an entire platform, start with a WhatsApp group to see if drivers and passengers are even interested.
Dreaming of launching a second-hand clothing marketplace?
π Begin with an Instagram page where people can book items via private message.
β‘οΈ An MVP is about testing before going all-in! π
π Why build an MVP ?
β Save time and money: Why spend β¬100,000 on a product nobody wants?
β Get real feedback: Donβt guess what your customers want β observe how they react to a simplified version.
β Attract investors: A working MVP is more convincing than an idea on paper.
β Adapt quickly: Winning startups are those that pivot based on user feedback.
π How to build an effective MVP?
1οΈβ£ Define the problem to solve π―
What issue does your product address?
Who are your target users?
π‘ Example: Uber started with a simple app to request a private driver in San Francisco. No shared rides, no dynamic pricing β just one core function: booking a ride via mobile.
2οΈβ£ Identify core features π οΈ
Focus on the one key value your product offers.
Eliminate anything unnecessary for your first test.
π‘ Example: Dropbox launched with nothing but a demo video to gauge interest β before even building the product!
3οΈβ£ Build a first version quickly π
Use no-code tools like Bubble or Webflow to build a prototype.
Test simple solutions: Google Forms, landing pages, social media.
π‘ Example: Airbnb started with a basic site and three air mattresses in an apartment β just to test if people would pay to sleep in someoneβs home.
4οΈβ£ Test on a small market π―
Donβt aim for 10,000 users from day one.
Start with a narrow target group and collect feedback.
π‘ Example: Instagram first tested its app with a few hundred users before going mainstream.
5οΈβ£ Analyze and improve constantly π
Look at what works, what doesn't.
Refine your product based on real user needs.
π‘ Example: Twitter started as an internal tool within a company before evolving into a global social network.
π Conclusion
An MVP is a powerful way to validate your idea quickly without wasting time or money.
It helps avoid costly failure and allows you to build something based on real feedback.
A successful startup is one that knows how to test, learn, and adapt fast.
π In short, itβs better to sell sandwiches from a food truck before opening a full-blown restaurant!
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