Most 'brilliant' app ideas fail because founders skip this one crucial step.
I've seen it a countless number of times. A founder gets a flash of inspiration, maybe even sketches out an idea a bit, and then jumps straight to trying to hire a dev team or learns to code. The problem? They haven't actually tested if anyone understands the idea, let alone wants to use it.
It's not about building the 'perfect' app first. It's about building the smallest, simplest version that shows someone EXACTLY what your idea does. A clickable demo. Something people can interact with and provide real, honest feedback on. A prototype isn't the finish line. It's the first honest test.
Think about it. Before you build the full thing, make sure people understand the first version. Your idea should be seen before it's overbuilt. Start with proof, not a giant invoice. What are your thoughts, Reddit? Has anyone here been burned by building too much too soon?