How to test whether your idea has a market

  • I see a lot of articles from you guys lately. It's cool, the articles are not bad and you are doing it the right way, you market your product by giving good articles. I think this is fine, just don't send out too much before you run out of content and become boring. Nobody would benefice from that. Once a week should be enough. Just my 2c.

  • There's a misconception that actually plays in your favor here: most people dramatically underestimate the execution risk of building a new product, particularly software.

    If you can communicate very clearly what the product is going to look like and what it's going to do, selling a product that isn't done yet is not much harder than selling one that is. In some ways it's easier, because the customers can fill in the details themselves, and they don't appreciate how hard it is to get all those detail right.

  • Would like to hear of an example where this worked. Even if I liked an idea someone pitched me on, I don't know if I'd give $10 to them to get early access to something they haven't started building yet.

    Perhaps I'm jading at seeing too many bad Show HN posts where I think, who would want that?

  • Ten dollars seems like a token amount that most clients would give you to just say, "Hey why not, maybe this will turn into something." I'd make it a higher amount or just, you know, genuinely ask them whether they would buy and use your product. Most people will give you their honest opinion either way.

  • And to find potential customers other than your mom&friends, [0] HN post can certainly help!

    [0]: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4987836

  • “Building a product to fit an existing market, is better than finding a market to fit an existing product.” - Unfortunately not my quote!

  • If you can get someone to pay you $10 for an application you may or may not build in a year then you are either a hell of a salesman or you found someone truly gullible.

  • Isn't this preciously what Kickstarter [http://www.kickstarter.com/] is for?

  • Asking for money with no product? This is also called panhandling...