Make your business idea the next MVP
Got a good idea? Move it from minimum viable product to launch without losing your shirt.

The steady rise of makers
I just arrived home from Barcelona and was catching up with a friend (weâll call him Lee). As weâre talking, I notice a roll of batteries wrapped in black electrical tape sitting upright on a chessboard.
âWhatâs that?,â I ask.
âThose are batteries I pulled from a few laptops. Iâm gonna make a âTeslaâ battery out of them,â he replied, referencing the new Powerwall from Tesla that provides energy for residential homes. âItâs going to power my AC this summer.â
âOh.â
He slid a schematic of his prototype toward me and continued: âIâm also going to create a windmill out of a fan. It should generate enough juice to keep the battery charged. If all goes well, my energy bill should be less than $25.â
At this point Iâm thinking, âWTF got into you?â
Only later on do I realize, itâs not just him.
From 1964 to 2014, the number of applications for patents in the United States shot through the roof. The number of patents granted is usually about half of the total submitted in a given year. But the point is: more and more people are making stuff.

Pretty cool. But how many of those patents became successful, profitable businesses? How many inventors, tinkerers, and builders are sustaining themselves with their products? Itâs one thing to research and develop something, but itâs quite another to build a successful business around it.
Why businesses fail
Hereâs what I mean. In 2014, Fortune magazine published an article titled Why startups fail, according to their founders. In it, they cited postmortems done on 101 startups (a postmortem explains why a company âdiedâ, according to the CEO or other insider). Hereâs the main reason why startups fail, as cited by 42% of polled startups:
ââŠthe number-one reason for failure, is the lack of a market need for their product.â
Business lesson #1: If no one wants your product, you donât have a businessâperiod. But how many startups build things people donât want with the irrational hope that theyâll convince them otherwise?
Can you imagine? Going through all the trouble of building something (because you think you have a great business idea) and nobody wants it? You spent an inordinate amount of time and money thinking, designing, and developing something only to discover that your efforts were in vain. How demoralizing.
The good news is this situation is totally preventable. How? If 100% of makers simply validated their ideas first, Iâm sure they could knock that number down significantly.
This guide will show you how to validate your next big ideaâand prevent unnecessary costs and heartache. After all, if this idea doesnât work out, you can always move on to the next one quickly and easily without losing your shirt, and more importantly, your confidence.
Câmon. Letâs get started.
Business validation overview
Validating a new business idea doesnât have to be complicated. There are three essential stages in the validation process.
- Stage I: Market validation
- Stage II: Idea validation
- Stage III: MVP (minimum viable product) validation
Ideally, youâll want to validate your market first, before testing your solution. Then put the necessary resources into building your MVP. But business validation is not a linear path. Some people jump right into the idea or solution because theyâre scratching their own itch. Think Sara Blakely (Spanx), Stepan Pachikov (Evernote), or even J.K. Rowling (Harry Potter).
You donât have to start at âmarket validationâ to be effective, but youâll want to revisit it later to refine your product/market fit. If youâre starting from scratch, it makes more sense to start there.
Letâs talk about each validation stage in more detail.

Stage I: Market validation
When Gary Halbert, the legendary copywriter, taught workshops, sometimes he would begin his classes with the following scenario:
âIf you and I both owned a hamburger stand and we were in a contest to see who could sell the most hamburgers, what advantages would you most like to have on your side to help you win?â
According to Halbert:
âSome of the students say they would like to have the advantage of having superior meat from which to make their burgers. Others say they want sesame seed buns. Others mention location. Someone usually wants to be able to offer the lowest prices.
So I tell them, âO.K., Iâll give you every single advantage you have asked for. I, myself, only want one advantage and, if you will give it to me, I will (when it comes to selling burgers) whip the pants off all of you!ââ
âWhatâs that?â they ask.
âThe only advantage I want is a starving crowd!â
This is a short lesson in market validation. Your goal at this stage is to find a starving crowdâor a market. Gary Bencivenga, who some consider the greatest copywriter of all time (maybe the name âGaryâ is predestined to sell stuff), once said:
âProblems are markets.â
Obviously, if people are hungry, thatâs a problem. If people are feeling disconnected from each other, thatâs a problem. If someoneâs bored, thatâs a problem.
Think about any market. Youâll find a ton of problems. The more urgent the problem, the more likely someone is willing to spend money. Think health, business, or education. Or the reverse of thoseâillness, lack of business, or ignorance.
Your starving crowd is all around you. But how do you know which market is the right one to go into? Well, that depends on a number of factors. You know your skills. You know what youâre interested in. Those are great places to start, but hereâs what I usually suggest to people with no idea where to begin: find a problem youâre passionate about solving.
Thatâs right. Donât find your passion first, because you may not be able to monetize it. Instead, find a problem that youâre passionate about. Then toss that problem into a blender with your unique knowledge, skills, and interests.
Once you figured that out, find a market thatâs willing to pay. Here are three ways:
- keyword research
- Amazon search
- run a âdeep-dive surveyâ
Understand market size with keyword research
Open a Google Adwords account so you can access their Keyword Planner tool. This tool will allow you to see what people are searching for online, giving you an idea of potential markets.
People have no shame typing in their deepest, darkest secrets into that tiny search box. Google keeps track of every search, tells you how often people are looking for a certain keyword phrase, and boom! You have all the market data you need. Number of searches, how much competition there is for a certain keyword, and how much people are paying (on average) to advertise using that keyword phrase.
Next, go to keywordtool.io to do one more search. Now youâre going to scrape search results for questions that your market is asking. Itâs pretty straightforward. Type in your search term, like âcontent marketing.â After you hit enter youâll get a list of keywords. Directly under the search box, youâll see the âquestionsâ tab. Click on that, and youâll get a list of questions that people are asking. Thereâs a nifty âcopyâ button so you can grab all those questions and place them in your favorite spreadsheet.
Youâre off to a great start.
Using Amazon as a market research tool
Amazon acts as a great search engine for market validation. Find popular products and see how you can improve or augment them by looking at 1â3 star reviews. For most products, if itâs not on Amazon, then thereâs probably not a starving crowd (unless itâs an app or software solution).
The deep-dive survey
What if you knew ahead of time which market to enter, what products to sell to that market, and the natural language that market uses to talk about their pain points? Would that be an advantage for you?
The âdeep-dive surveyâ comes from Ryan Levesque, author of Ask., an excellent tool for understanding any market youâre looking to enter.

It begins with the premise/assumption that neither you nor your potential customer knows what they want. Ryan makes a strong case that most market research surveys focus on the wrong questions, and heâs narrowed it down to one revealing, but critical question:
Whatâs your single biggest challenge/frustration with____?
If youâre thinking about selling fountain pens, then your question would be:
Whatâs your single biggest frustration with fountain pens?
If youâre thinking about building a photo editing app, again:
Whatâs your single biggest challenge with photo editing apps?
Simple, right? But how does this question work for you?
First, it allows someone to answer accurately about something they donât want. If you asked them what they wanted instead, they would be forced to make up a solution on the spot, and chances are they wouldnât be able to do it because they wouldâve solved their problem already if they could.
Second, this question tells you about your respondentâs recent experience with a particular challenge. If you sent this question to active users in this market, these frustrations and challenges would still be fresh in their minds.
Finally, asking this particular open-ended question allows people to answer any way they like. You want to encourage respondents to provide as much detail as possible.
When done with the right audience, the deep-dive survey gives you the precise pain points, the exact language your market uses (this is useful for writing copy and sales scripts), and enough details about your target market to determine if you should take the plunge or not. It also minimizes survey fatigue and reduces the number of questions asked.
So start with the âchallenge/frustrationâ question first. Then follow that question up with this simple A/B multiple choice question to segment your audience into different buckets. Why? Because youâre likely to uncover niche markets where you can offer more custom solutions.
Using our photo editing app as an example, the follow-up question would look something like this:
Which of the following best describes you?
- I use photo editing apps at least 3â4 times a week.
- I use them 3â4 times a month.
For all the people who answer #1, ask a follow-up question, using the same language to further segment your audience. Like this:
Which of the following best describes you?
- I am a graphic designer.
- I am a studio photographer.
- I am a wedding photographer.
- I am nature photographer.
- I am a photojournalist.
See how this whole process helps you identify your market more accurately? Itâs a great way to validate your next market (=starving crowd) and segment your audience. I highly recommend Ryanâs book to learn the nuances of using surveys to make, market, and refine your next product or service.
Letâs move on to validating your solution.
Stage II: Idea validation
Okay, so you validated your market, but you donât have a product or a service to offer. You havenât designed or built anything yet. What can you do?
Letâs list them out:
Website + ads
Alex Brola, co-founder and president of CheckMaid.com, which runs an online, on-demand cleaning service told Entrepreneur Magazine:
âWe actually validated [the idea] without having any cleaners to do the cleanings. We threw up a site, a booking form, a phone number, and ran some [pay-per-click] ads through Google and Bing, and saw what the conversion rate would be had we actually had cleaners.â
You take an idea, build a simple website offering your services, and drive traffic through ads.
In-person validation
Sometimes you solve a problem that potentially affects everyone. When thatâs the case, you can start having conversations with just about anyone. In his book, Will It Fly?, Pat Flynn talks about his coffee shop validation.

As Pat waits in line for coffee, he turns around and offers to buy the person behind him a cup of coffee. Once someone accepts, he asks them for a moment of their time to answer a couple of questions (reciprocity in action). Pat explains that heâs an entrepreneur and looking to validate a business idea. People are usually responsive and Pat gets validation for the price of a cup of coffee.
Another example comes from Aaron Patzer, founder of Mint.com. Mint is a personal finance web app that connects to your bank, categorizes transactions, then uses an algorithm to determine where you can save money. For example, if the amount of money in your savings account could yield a higher interest rate somewhere else, Mint would pass that information on to you. Same with credit cards, your cable bill, or any recurring expense. Mint makes money whenever someone takes its advice as an affiliate for all recommendations.
Explaining the process he adopted for validating Mint, Aaron says:
âWhen I started Mint I took a very different approach⊠and this is sort of the methodology that I formed (Validate your idea > Create a prototype > Build the right team > Raise funding).
And did he do it the conventional way? Nope:
âNumber one is to validate your idea. I actually didnât write a line of code until I did about three or four monthsâ worth of thinking on Mint, which I think is counter to what a lot of people will suggest. A lot of people will say âJust get the product out there, just iterate very, very quickly, (and) just make a prototype.ââ
Aaron approached different venture capitalists with his idea, but they told him the same thing. No one will trust you with their financial and personal information.
So what did Aaron do? He went to the local train station with three different product concepts written on a piece of paper. He asked random people what they thought of his solution as they waited for their train (they didnât have anything else to do but wait around, according to him).
Then Aaron hit on a concept that sealed the deal. When asking people if Mint sounded secure to them, more of them said âyesâ after he added the following phrase: bank-level data security.
Once âmaybeâ and ânoâ turned to âyes,â Aaron simply had to build it. Mint went live in 2007. In 2009, he sold Mint to Intuit for $170 million dollars.
Those two examples should give you some ideas on how to test your idea first. Write a few headlines or offers, get in front of your target market, and ask them for a few moments of their time.
But perhaps you have the itch to build or design something first. That leads us to the final stage.
Stage III: Minimum viable product (MVP) validation
What does MVP mean?
Normally, when someone says, âvalidate your MVP,â theyâre talking about your âminimum viable product.â But validating your service works here too.
Minimum viable product doesnât mean a half-baked cake. An MVP must work, first and foremost, then it must either prove or disprove your business idea. It has to be desirable and complete (whether itâs version .05 or 1.0) or your product is not ready for the public. Also, when you think minimum, think âcake.â Brandon Schauer from Adaptive Path came up with the âcakeâ model for product strategy.
For example, your initial idea is to bake a huge wedding cake with all the trimmings. Great cake, frosting, decorations, candles, sprinkles, whatever your ultimate user wants. Do you start making the best cake ever and try to sell that? No. You start small. You donât want to invest a ton of time and resources into building a product nobody wants, right?
So start with a cupcake. Get yourself sorted with a project plan and some tools then start to build, test and learn. The point is that the first version must be useful and remarkable without losing your shirt in the process.
This concept from Spotify accurately explains the MVP process.

In the top half of this visual, youâll notice that thereâs not a usable version of the product until stage 4. In the bottom half, you have a usable product from the get-go. By the way, if you havenât read How Spotify Builds Products, itâs an invaluable resource.
So donât go too far in building your best idea. Itâs likely that you can do just enough to get it validated without intense designing, coding, and paying a ton in ads. If youâre building an app, sketch it on paper first, and describe it to your user in person.
If youâre faster with digital tools, use Keynote or PowerPoint to make your MVP. Google Ventures are well known for using Keynote to build quick prototypes.
In fact, Google Ventures just released Sprint, a great guide to building prototypes in 5 days. I highly recommend it.

Validating services
SeekPanda sought to validate their language interpretation services. They used Typeform as their main landing page before investing in website design (smart way to save money). They drove traffic through ads and the rest is history. As Matt Conger explained it to me:
âTraveling for business is stressful enough. Especially in a country like China, where SeekPanda was started. We wanted to bring real-time booking to the interpreter industry. Our goal was for users to need less than one minute to fill out a form, and less than one minute to receive a personalized response.
Users would only see 6-12 questions from our bank of 30+. We hacked improvements to Typeformâs calculator feature to present personalized prices based on user answers.
Our conversion rate on our homepage increased by a factor of 4x.â
Hereâs how their MVP looked using Typeform:

Once Matt and co. validated their idea, they dropped some cash on a better website design.
Running Ads
Use Google Adwords, Facebook ads, or focus on LinkedIn to offer B2B services.
Before writing your ad, make sure you spend plenty of time working on your headline. Even the best products in the world are obsolete if you canât get your marketâs attention. A headline is the ad for your ad. Youâll need a good one.
Hereâs a handy guide to give you some tips when writing your next headline.
Product validation
The best way to validate any product is by demonstration. If you can demo it in person, so much the better, but a video demo works too. Think Youtube, Vimeo, or some other video hosting platform.
The most famous use of infomercials came from two well-known pitchmen, Ron Popeil and Billy Mays. Watch them if you want a master lesson in validating physical products.
Can you imagine a t-shirt business that earned over 2 million dollars in 30 days? Charlie Jabaley, manager of Rapper 2 Chainz told Shopify: âWe just didnât have a good track record selling merchandise like t-shirts.â After selling eight total t-shirts the first day they were available, Jabaley notes: âIt was absolutely terrible.â
How do you go from selling 8 t-shirts to 2 million dollars? Hereâs the formula:
- Starts with a t-shirt design
- Post designs on Instagram
- Analyze and use follower behavior and feedback to iterate
- Kill unpopular designs
- Turn popular designs into merchandise that generates millions of dollars
âNow we understand exactly what people want,â Jabaley says. âWe know in real-time whatâs popular and whatâs not, which really de-risks the merchandising process and allows us to make only what fans are willing to buy.â
Around Christmas, Jabaley posted a âdabbingâ Santa sweater. Without inventory, he posted it on their ecommerce store and the result was their first big hit.

- The sweaters generated $20,000 that day.
- They did $30,000 the following day.
- The sweaters went on to do $2.1 million in 30 days.
The tools for validation? Instagram and a good designer.
Digital products
Many SaaS companies in the B2B space allow free trials or demos of their products. You could apply the same tactic and offer your digital product for free to a select few âbetaâ testers in exchange for testimonials.
Free samples still work. Amazon allows browsers to read the table of contents and first chapter of a book to lure them into buyers. If youâre offering a book or a course, then share one of your best lessons for free. Add value before you take their money.
Ultimately your goal is to get your product in front of others as fast as possible. Collect feedback, then iterate and improve. Get it out there again. Repeat the process until you have something thatâs useful and people are happy to pay for.
Getting traction
Thereâs one more thing to consider as you develop your MVP into a sustainable, repeatable business. Is your product matched with the right market? Remember the starving crowd analogy? If you make foot-long calzones and your market is starving for foot-long calzones, then youâre obviously a great match. This is called product/market fit.
The question is, will your market buy from you again? Why or why not? Could another competitor easily fill their needs? Can your customer live without you? What can you do to improve the product so itâs better for customers? Ask your customers these questions as you fine-tune and tweak your product or service to approach that elusive holy grail of product/market fit.
Final thoughtsâŠ
Validation is a great feeling. But imagine the opposite scenario. When you donât feel validated. When you donât have any proof that youâre on the right track. Your confidence turns to skepticism.
Confidence is another word for trust. If you donât trust yourself, you wonât have the conviction you need to push a project forward. And nothing kills the creative spirit faster than doubt.
And how do you develop trust/confidence? Through practice. Itâs the only way. When you push more and more ideas out to the public, when you shoot for volume and speed, youâll naturally get better. Like anything, if you havenât done it before, it may seem awkward at first. Youâll feel incompetent. Thatâs normal.
Practice is the fastest way to learn and learning is your competitive advantage.
But even with all that practice, if you donât get validation from the outside, you donât have a business. Good luck.