What are you Looking for?
Populate the sidearea with useful widgets. It’s simple to add images, categories, latest post, social media icon links, tag clouds, and more.
P: Phone:
E: Email:
A: Address:
A minimum viable product, or MVP, is a product with enough features to attract early-adopter customers and validate a product idea early in the product development cycle. In industries such as software, the MVP can help the product team receive user feedback as quickly as possible to iterate and improve the product.
Because the agile methodology is built on validating and iterating products based on user input, the MVP plays a central role in agile development.
Eric Ries, who introduced the concept of the minimum viable product as part of his Lean Startup methodology, describes the purpose of an MVP this way: It is the version of a new product that allows a team to collect the maximum amount of validated learning about customers with the least amount of effort.
A company might choose to develop and release a minimum viable product because its product team wants to:
In addition to allowing your company to validate an idea for a product without building the entire product, an MVP can also help minimize the time and resources you might otherwise commit to building a product that won’t succeed.
How do you develop a minimum viable product, and how will your team know when you have an MVP ready for launch? Here are a few strategic steps to take.
Before weighing which features to build, the first step in developing your MVP is to make sure the product will align with your team’s or your company’s strategic goals.
What are those goals? Are you working toward a revenue number in the coming six months? Do you have limited resources? These questions might affect whether now is even the time to start developing a new MVP.
Also, ask what purpose this minimum viable product will serve. For example, will it attract new users in a market adjacent to the market for your existing products? If that is one of your current business objectives, then this MVP plan might be strategically viable.
But if your company’s current priority is to continue focusing on your core markets, you might need to shelve this idea and focus instead, perhaps, on an MVP designed to offer new functionality for your existing customers.
Now that you’ve determined your MVP plans align with your business objectives, you can start thinking through the specific solutions you want your product to offer users. These solutions, which you might write up in user stories, epics, or features, do not represent the product’s overall vision—only subsets of that vision. Remember, you can develop only a small amount of functionality for your MVP.
You will need to be strategic in deciding which limited functionality to include in your MVP. You can base these decisions on several factors, including:
Now that you’ve weighed the strategic elements above and settled on the limited functionality you want for your MVP, it’s time to translate this into an action plan for development.
Note: It’s essential to keep in mind the V in MVP—the product must be viable. That means it must allow your customers to complete an entire task or project and provide a high-quality user experience. An MVP cannot be a user interface with many half-built tools and features. It must be a working product that your company should be able to sell.
If you’re wondering what this would look like in practice, let’s review how a couple of familiar brands launched successful MVPs.
With no money to build a business, the founders of Airbnb used their own apartment to validate their idea to create a market offering short-term, peer-to-peer rental housing online. They created a minimalist website, published photos and other details about their property, and found several paying guests almost immediately.
The location-based social network Foursquare started as just a one-feature MVP, offering only check-ins and gamification rewards. The Foursquare development team began adding recommendations, city guides, and other features until they had validated the idea with an eager and growing user base.