Your MVP is supposed to be embarrassing.
If you don't cringe when you ship it, well... you're already late.
Everyone gets this wrong:
↳ You're obsessing over your logo.
↳ You're polishing pixels for months.
↳ You're building complex automations before you have your first paying customer.
That's not an MVP.
That's playing pretend startup.
Want the hard truth?
1/ Real MVPs feel illegal.
They're duct-taped together, manual as hell, and ugly af.
2/ Real MVPs are shipped in days, not quarters.
If no one's touched it within the first week, you're not shipping—you're stalling.
3/ Real MVPs unlock insights, not praise.
You're validating hunger, not winning product-of-the-month on Product Hunt.
If people won't pay you when it's messy, ugly, and half-broken...
THEY WON'T PAY WHEN IT'S PERFECT.
So drop Photoshop.
Close Figma.
Forget the fancy dev agency.
Pick up:
↳ Google Sheets
↳ WhatsApp
↳ No-code tools
↳ Your bare hands pretending it's automated.
Remember:
You're not building a product — you're proving a problem.
You're not scaling a company — you're testing your hypothesis.
Ugly, fast, paid > Pretty, slow, free.
Trust me, if you had seen the BuddiesHR MVP (a clunky birthday Slack bot), you would have cried ^^'
Agree?
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