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The only thing missing from this MVP is... the product. It's not a beta or alpha version, it's not even a proof of concept from a material point of view it's almost nothing . Many types of MVPs have this intangibility characteristic, such as the so-called wizard of OZ or button to nowhere MVPs. Markus -Spike- via- Unsplashed Markus Spike via Unsplashed AND EMILI deals with strategic development and consultancy on digital channels. Discover Digital Product Design services An MVP is disposable or almost is that illustrated by James O'Brien, according to which an MVP should have four attributes Economical allows us to discover things at the lowest possible cost; Quick it must allow us to do it quickly to advance to the next step; Measurable its results must be quantifiable in relation to the success/failure criteria we have set ourselves.
Dead An MVP is made to discover and be thrown away; an MVP that is too elaborate photo retouching or expensive ends up looking too good to be eliminated or changed, which goes against the principle of iteration. According to O'Brien, ideally an MVP should not have a dedicated budget for its creation spending on the creation of something they will feel invested with the responsibility for its success. At that point, how do you explain that the success of the project is its failure , because we need to make mistakes to learn? On the other hand, we can still call MVP things that more closely resemble "real" products for example, we can imagine that in Jared Spool's history.

MVPs arrived at a certain point in the form of sites or apps where users could upload photos of the accidents. However, perhaps we could make some distinctions, starting from which phase of ideation we are in to understand what we need. An MVP for every occasion The types of MVPs that I am going to list should not be understood as rigid categories they are coordinated to understand whether what we need at a given moment is more like "almost nothing.
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