Salt & Stone launched its first deodorant knowing it wasn't the final version. The key was that it was significantly better than any competitor. The founder advises launching a superior product and iterating publicly, rather than waiting for an unattainable state of perfection.
Numi's first crowdfunded product didn't have the technical sweat-proof fabric they later developed. By the time they shipped, they knew it wasn't the best possible version. However, launching it allowed them to enter the market, gather feedback, and generate revenue to fund the next iteration.
Founders often get stuck endlessly perfecting a product, believing it must be flawless before launch. This is a fallacy, as "perfection" is subjective. The correct approach is to launch early and iterate based on real market feedback, as there is no perfect time to start.
Only showing the final, polished product makes others feel inadequate and behind. More importantly, it prevents you from building an engaged audience by not sharing the journey. Sharing mistakes, pivots, and behind-the-scenes struggles gives others permission to start messy and builds their curiosity for your eventual launch.
Don't treat validation as a one-off task before development. The most successful products maintain a constant feedback loop with users to adapt to changing needs, regulations, and tastes. The worst mistake is to stop listening after the initial launch, as businesses that fail to adapt ultimately fail.
To get to your first sale a day, prioritize speed over perfection by launching a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) line of 6-12 items. The goal isn't immediate profitability, but to get real products into the market quickly. This allows for rapid learning and feedback, preventing the common failure of launching a 'perfect' collection to no audience.
Founders embrace the MVP for their initial product but often abandon this lean approach for subsequent features, treating each new development as a major project requiring perfection. Maintaining high velocity requires applying an iterative, MVP-level approach to every single feature and launch, not just the first one.
Releasing a minimum viable product isn't about cutting corners; it's a strategic choice. It validates the core idea, generates immediate revenue, and captures invaluable customer feedback, which is crucial for building a better second version.