MVP Product Guides for Startup Founders

7 structured guides covering product scope, development cost, no-code vs custom build decisions, and execution strategy.

Published on • Last updated on .

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SaaS Complexity 4/5 4-8 weeks

B2B SaaS MVP

Core subscription software solving one painful business workflow.

Multiple plans (starter / pro / enterprise) Free tier + paid upgrade
Direct outreach (email, LinkedIn, DM) Niche communities (Reddit, Discord, Slack)
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What Each MVP Development Plan Covers

Every plan follows a standardized structure so you can compare product types and make build decisions faster. No fluff — just the decisions that matter before you write a single line of code.

MVP Scope Definition

What to build in v1 and what to explicitly cut. In-scope and out-of-scope feature lists based on what real users need to validate the idea.

Recommended Tech Stack

Frontend, backend, database, auth, payments, hosting, and analytics — with specific tool recommendations and 1–2 line justifications per choice.

Timeline & Budget

Week-by-week execution timeline with phase breakdowns. Budget ranges for solo builds ($2K–$8K), freelancer hires ($8K–$25K), and agency builds ($15K–$50K).

Risk Warnings

Common traps that kill MVPs — overbuilding, premature scaling, wrong pricing model, and technical debt patterns specific to each product type.

Launch Strategy

Recommended launch channels (Product Hunt, SEO, communities, cold outreach), pricing models (freemium, flat monthly, usage-based), and validation signals to track.

Execution Path

Two paths: build it yourself with the recommended stack, or hand the plan to a vetted builder. Both options include MVP cost and timeline estimates.

MVP Development FAQ

What is MVP development?
MVP development is the process of building the smallest version of a product that delivers enough value to attract early adopters and validate a business idea. Instead of spending 6+ months and $50,000+ on a full product, MVP development focuses on shipping a working product in 4–12 weeks that tests real demand. According to CB Insights, 35% of startups fail because there is no market need — MVP development exists to catch that before you run out of runway.
How long does it take to build an MVP?
Most MVP development timelines range from 4 to 12 weeks depending on complexity. A simple landing page with waitlist takes 1–2 weeks. A SaaS product with authentication, payments, and a core workflow takes 6–10 weeks. Marketplace MVPs with two-sided matching typically take 8–12 weeks. The key is ruthlessly cutting scope to only the features needed to test your core assumption.
How much does it cost to build an MVP?
MVP cost ranges from $2,000 to $50,000 depending on your build path. Solo founders using no-code or AI-assisted tools can build for $2,000–$8,000. Hiring a freelance developer typically costs $8,000–$25,000. Working with a specialized MVP development agency runs $15,000–$50,000. Each plan on MVPable includes specific budget estimates for all three paths so you can compare MVP cost by product type.
What should an MVP include?
An MVP should include only the features required to solve one core problem for one target user. A typical MVP development scope covers: user authentication, one core workflow (the main thing users do), a basic dashboard, and a payment integration if monetized. Everything else — admin panels, analytics dashboards, team features, integrations — belongs in v2. Each plan on MVPable lists exactly what is in-scope and out-of-scope for each product type.
What tech stack should I use for MVP development?
The best tech stack for MVP development depends on your product type, technical skill, and budget. For SaaS products, Laravel or Next.js with a PostgreSQL database covers most use cases. For marketplaces, frameworks with built-in authentication and payment support save weeks. No-code tools like Bubble or Lovable work for simpler products. Each plan on MVPable recommends a specific stack with justifications based on speed-to-market and long-term scalability.
What is the difference between an MVP and a prototype?
A prototype demonstrates how a product could work, usually as a clickable mockup or design file — it has no real backend or data. An MVP is a working product that real users can sign up for, use, and pay for. Prototypes validate UX assumptions. MVP development validates business assumptions: will people pay, retain, and refer? Founders should build a prototype first (1–2 weeks), then start MVP development (4–12 weeks) once the core UX is validated.