The valuable part of this article is to limit a startup idea to one month of initial effort. And don't continue the effort unless after a month you can gain some sort of useful validation that there is a market for your idea.
This also means that you will have to stick to the basic core of your idea and skip lots of details, in order to have something that can be shown after a month.
I've seen too many startup ideas that people started working on that weren't necessarily bad ideas, but their plan was to make an MVP, the scope of which would take a team of engineers at least a year to deliver.
This also means that you will have to stick to the basic core of your idea and skip lots of details, in order to have something that can be shown after a month.
I've seen too many startup ideas that people started working on that weren't necessarily bad ideas, but their plan was to make an MVP, the scope of which would take a team of engineers at least a year to deliver.