In the startup world, the Minimum Viable Product (MVP) has become gospel. Founders are taught to build the simplest version of their product, get it into the hands of users, and iterate based on feedback. While this is sound advice for product development, it completely misses the bigger picture.

An MVP proves that you can build something people want to use. But it doesn’t prove that you can build a sustainable company around it. What founders actually need to focus on is building a Minimum Viable Business (MVB).

The MVP Trap

The trap many early-stage founders fall into is believing that product equals business. They spend months refining features, tweaking the UI, and obsessing over the user journey, assuming that if the product is good enough, the business will naturally follow.

But a product without a go-to-market strategy, a pricing model, or an understanding of unit economics is just an expensive hobby. You might have built the best widget in the world, but if it costs you £50 to acquire a customer who only pays you £10, your startup will fail regardless of how elegant your code is.

What is a Minimum Viable Business?

A Minimum Viable Business is the smallest set of conditions necessary to prove that your startup can generate sustainable revenue. It requires you to validate not just the product, but the entire commercial engine.

To build an MVB, you need to answer three critical questions:

  • Can we acquire customers efficiently? You need a repeatable, scalable channel for finding new users that doesn’t rely entirely on your personal network or unscalable PR stunts.
  • Will they pay for it? Free users are great for vanity metrics, but paying customers are the only validation that matters. You need to test pricing early and often.
  • Can we deliver it profitably? Your unit economics need to make sense. If your Cost of Customer Acquisition (CAC) is higher than your Lifetime Value (LTV), you don’t have a business.

The Bootstrapping Advantage

Focusing on an MVB forces you to adopt a bootstrapping mindset. Instead of relying on venture capital to subsidise an unsustainable business model, you are forced to build a company that can stand on its own two feet.

This doesn’t mean you can never raise funding. But raising money to scale a proven MVB is a vastly different proposition to raising money to figure out if you have a business at all. When you approach investors with a working commercial engine, you dictate the terms. When you approach them with just a product, they dictate the terms.

At StartUp Wingman, my focus is always on helping founders build a real, sustainable business. If you’re stuck in the MVP trap and need help transitioning to an MVB, let’s talk.

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At StartUp Wingman I’ve managed to generate the relevant experience, skillset and passion to help innovative founders and startups establish their problem-solution-market fit and establish not just their Minimum Viable Product but their Minimum Viable Business with a focusing on bootstrapping to get the business to where it should be.

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Email: jamesb@startupwingman.co.uk
Phone: 07737 655 840