Product Strategy

Creating a digital product: A guide to avoiding common pitfalls and building smart

Micaela Perdomo
CPO
October 22, 2024
10 min read
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Building a digital product can be an incredibly rewarding journey, but without the right strategy and planning, it’s easy to fall into traps that waste time and money. As CPO in Nareia Software, I’ve seen the same mistakes crop up again and again. In this guide, I want to share how to avoid those pitfalls and help you question your path to build a product.

Know your “Why” and define the problem

Many clients come in with a great idea, but they don’t always have a clear sense of why the product is necessary. Defining the problem you’re solving is fundamental. Ask yourself: what pain point does this product address? Who is it for? Without a strong foundation, it’s easy to lose your way during development. 

  • Common mistake: jumping in with an idea because it sounds exciting, without validating it first.
  • Tip: do some early market research, test the interest of potential users with small (and often cheap) experiments. Define a clear problem statement that will guide your journey from start to finish.

The importance of an MVP: Start small, stay focused

The idea of a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) isn’t just a hackneyed approach, it’s the foundation of smart product development. An MVP helps you validate your product idea in the quickest, simplest way possible, giving you insight into its value from a user’s perspective. The goal isn’t to launch with every feature, it’s to identify and deliver the core functionality that solves a real user problem and provides meaningful feedback.
The challenge of creating an effective MVP it’s about finding that sweet spot: offering just enough for users to grasp the value, without overcomplicating this or missing the opportunity for early learning. 

  • Common mistake: trying to launch a “complete product” instead of focusing on the bare minimum, often out of fear that users won’t be impressed by a simpler version. 
  • Tip: define the smallest version of your product that still delivers value. Be critical about every feature, if it doesn’t directly support the core value, or helps you validate the idea, save it for later.

Understand the real value of your product 

A successful product isn’t just about features, it’s about delivering benefits that improve user’s lives. You need to deeply understand what unique value your product delivers. Ask yourself: what do users actually gain from this? How does it solve a problem or make life easier?

  • Common mistake: misjudging value by focusing on what you think is important rather than what the user finds valuable. 
  • Tip: talk to potential users, build prototypes in simple tools, and iterate on your MVP based on their feedback. The best features are often discovered from users' insights rather than assumptions.

Technology dictating the product 

Technology should be the means to solve a problem, not the definition of the product itself. Too often I see clients who get caught up in a particular tech trend, and the entire focus shifts toward using that technology rather than solving the core problem.
For example, when AI becomes the central theme, instead of first defining the user’s problem and how the product should solve it, the technology itself starts dictating the direction. AI is a powerful tool, but it’s just that, a tool. It should enhance the solution, not overshadow the value you are trying to deliver. 

  • Common mistake: letting technology drive product decisions, rather than focusing on the problem and the users. 
  • Tip: Start by thoroughly understanding the problems and needs of your users. Then select or develop technology that effectively addresses those needs. Even if you have access to innovative tech, it should enhance your solution rather than dictate it. Always ensure that technology serves the solution, not the other way around.

Budget control: when bigger isn’t always better

Having a big budget might seem like an advantage, but it doesn’t guarantee success. In fact, it can lead to overconfidence, encouraging you to add unnecessary features or delay important decisions.
A smaller budget can actually work for your advantage, forcing you to stay focused, and make resourceful choices.

  • Common mistake: thinking that you need a lot of money to validate a good idea. Believing that more money will automatically speed up development or lead to success.
  • Tip: Set a budget that allows focused development but forces prioritization of the most critical features. Build an MVP cost-effectively, with an emphasis on learning and validation before making any big investments. 

Also, think carefully about when you spend money. Don’t allocate your entire budget upfront. Instead, use just enough to validate your MVP and confirm that your product is viable before committing to the next phases of development

Team composition: get the right talent involved

To build a successful product, you need the right team. Clients sometimes overlook the need for specific roles, like product manager or UX designers, assuming developers are the most essential roles you need to build a digital product. 

  • Common mistake: overburdening developers with tasks and responsibilities outside their expertise, covering the role of product manager because you think you know your product best.
  • Tip: build a diverse team from the start, designers, product managers, developers, QA testers. Product strategists are particularly crucial on the MVP stage, definition is everything while you try to validate your idea. To build that validated idea you can arm up with a great tech team, but on its own time

Conclusion

Creating a digital product isn’t just about the money, the tech or the team, it’s about having a clear strategy, managing risks intelligently, and being adaptable. By understanding the common pitfalls and focusing on building  an adjusted MVP that delivers real value, you can create a product that resonates with users and makes smart use of your resources. Start small, validate every step, and stay flexible, that’s the key to avoiding pitfalls when your are building digital products. 

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