The MVP Trap
Most founders think an MVP means building the simplest possible version of their product. But "simple" doesn't mean "stripped of value." A good MVP is focused, not incomplete.
Scope Smart, Not Small
The key to a successful MVP is identifying the core value proposition — the one thing your product does better than anything else — and building only around that. Everything else is noise at this stage.
What to Include
- The primary user flow (onboarding → core action → outcome)
- Analytics from day one (events, funnels, retention)
- Clean, professional UI that builds trust
What to Skip
- Admin panels with 20 features nobody uses yet
- Multi-language support before you have users
- Complex integrations that can wait
Validate With Data, Not Opinions
Once your MVP is live, the real work begins. Set up event tracking, build funnels, and measure what users actually do — not what they say they'll do. We use Fyolog to track every meaningful interaction from day one.
Ship in 10–21 Days
At Fyomind, we've refined our process to deliver focused MVPs in 10–21 days. The secret? Structured discovery, clean architecture, and a product-first mindset that prioritizes outcomes over features.
Ready to build your MVP? Let's talk.