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Before investing in a full SaaS platform, manually create the end result (e.g., reports in Excel/PowerPoint) and attempt to sell it directly. This low-cost, concierge-style experiment quickly validates if customers have a real willingness to pay.

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A visually unappealing directory with placeholder 'lorem ipsum' text still generated thousands of dollars in high-value B2B leads. This proves that in an underserved niche, even a minimal, imperfect product can powerfully validate market demand before significant investment is made.

Validate business ideas by creating a fake prototype or wireframe and selling it to customers first. This confirms demand and secures revenue before you invest time and money into development, which the speaker identifies as the hardest part of validation.

Instead of pitching a future product, identify an enterprise champion's urgent, blocked project. Deliver the solution manually as a service first (e.g., a PDF report). This validates demand, generates revenue, and is a common path in enterprise software.

Internal debates and market studies are noise. The clearest signal to build a new product is when a potential customer explicitly states they will pay for a simplified solution to a complex problem. This removes ambiguity and confirms a genuine, urgent need.

Before building a complex feature, validate its value by manually creating the desired output for customers. The Buildots team used Excel to generate performance insights from their data. Only after seeing customers act on these manual reports did they productize the feature.

Validate startup ideas by building the simplest possible front end—what the customer sees—while handling all back-end logistics manually. This allows founders to prove customers will pay for a concept before over-investing in expensive technology, operations, or infrastructure.

Replace speculative feedback from discovery calls with a process that would be "weird if it didn't work." First, get strangers to pre-pay for a solution. Then, deliver it manually. This confirms real demand (payment) and validates the solution's value (retention) before writing code.

Crisp.ai's founder advocates for selling a product before it's built. His team secured over $100,000 from 30 customers using only a Figma sketch. This approach provides the strongest form of market validation, proving customer demand and significantly strengthening a startup's position when fundraising with VCs.

Validate market demand by securing payment from customers before investing significant resources in building anything. This applies to software, hardware, and services, completely eliminating the risk of creating something nobody wants to buy.

Instead of perfecting a product, generate a basic "bare bones" version using AI, place it on a simple landing page, and secure initial sales. This validates demand with minimal effort. Use the revenue and early feedback to then invest in creating a more robust, higher-quality version.