Why Most MVPs Fail Before They Even Launch
Most founders think their MVP failed because of bad code or a weak team. The real reason? They built the wrong thing for too long without validating once. That's not a development problem. It's a decision problem. And if you're a CEO or product head evaluating your first build, this distinction will save you months of wasted runway. The Silent Killer: Building in the Dark Traditional MVP development follows a familiar pattern: design, code, test, deploy. Repeat. The problem is that cycle takes 8–12 weeks on average. By the time real users touch the product, you've already spent half your seed round on assumptions. Most early-stage products go through 2–3 major pivots. If each pivot costs 10 weeks of rework, you're out of runway before you find product-market fit. Speed of learning always beats speed of building. What Smart Founders Do Instead The founders who move fastest aren't the ones with bigger budgets. They're the ones who reduce the time bet...