Inigra Sp. z o.o.
Office: Piekary 7, Poznań, Poland
VAT-ID: 6492316515
If you’re building a startup, you’ve probably heard the term MVP many times.
But what does MVP really mean — and what should it include?
Let’s explain it simply, without buzzwords or technical jargon.
MVP stands for Minimum Viable Product.
In simple terms, an MVP is:
The smallest version of a product that solves a real problem and can be used by real users.
Not a prototype.
Not a demo.
Not a “nice idea”.
An MVP is something people can actually use, test, and pay for.
A real, working product
Focused on one core problem
Built to validate demand
Designed to collect user feedback
Ready to be improved after launch
A full-featured product
A clickable Figma design
A PowerPoint presentation
A “version 1.0 for everyone”
If users can’t use it, it’s not an MVP.
The goal of an MVP is learning, not perfection.
Founders build MVPs to:
Validate their idea with real users
Avoid wasting time and money
Test pricing and positioning
Learn what actually matters to customers
Reduce the risk before scaling
An MVP helps you answer the most important question:
Is this worth building further?
A good MVP includes only what’s necessary to solve the core problem.
Typically:
One main user flow
Core functionality (nothing extra)
Basic UX (clear, usable, not perfect)
Analytics or feedback mechanisms
A scalable technical foundation
The key rule:
If removing a feature doesn’t break the main value — it shouldn’t be there.
This is a common source of confusion.
Shows how the product might work
Used for internal validation
Often not connected to real data
Not used by real users
A real product
Used by real users
Runs on real infrastructure
Can generate revenue
Prototype = looks real
MVP = works in the real world
Yes — but with limitations. Read more here.
No-code tools are great for:
Early validation
Simple workflows
Fast experiments
However, many no-code MVPs struggle when:
User numbers grow
Performance matters
Custom logic is needed
Integrations become complex
That’s why many startups:
Start with no-code
Validate the idea
Transition to a custom, scalable MVP
A market-ready MVP:
Is stable and reliable
Handles real users safely
Has clean architecture
Can be extended without rebuilding everything
Supports growth instead of blocking it
This is where technical decisions made early really matter. Read more here.
Some of the most common mistakes:
Building too many features
Optimizing before validation
Choosing tech that doesn’t scale
Treating an MVP like a final product
Skipping user feedback
An MVP is not about being impressive — it’s about being useful.
In one sentence:
An MVP is the simplest possible product that delivers real value to real users and helps you learn what to build next.
Nothing more. Nothing less.
At Inigra Software House, we help founders:
Turn ideas into market-ready MVPs
Migrate from no-code to scalable solutions
Make smart technical decisions early
Build products that can grow with the business
👉 Book a free discovery call and let’s talk about your MVP.
We’ll review your idea, discuss the next steps, and suggest the best way to bring your product to life.