Shape.Mvp Guide: From Concept to Usable Prototype
Overview
A concise, practical roadmap for turning an idea into a functional prototype using Shape.Mvp. Focuses on rapid validation, user feedback, and iterative refinement to minimize development risk.
Who it’s for
- Product managers and founders validating new ideas
- Designers and developers building clickable or code-backed prototypes
- UX researchers running early user tests
Key stages
-
Clarify the problem
- Outcome: a single, testable problem statement and target user persona.
- Action: write a 1–2 sentence problem hypothesis and list top 3 user jobs-to-be-done.
-
Define success metrics
- Outcome: measurable criteria for a viable prototype (e.g., task completion rate ≥60%, NPS ≥30).
- Action: pick 2 primary metrics and 1 qualitative goal.
-
Sketch core flows
- Outcome: the minimal user journeys that prove or disprove the hypothesis.
- Action: draw 3–5 screens or steps per flow; mark must-have vs nice-to-have features.
-
Build the prototype
- Outcome: a clickable or lightweight coded prototype in Shape.Mvp.
- Action: prioritize features using MoSCoW; use prebuilt components for speed; keep scope ≤3 user tasks.
-
Prepare testing materials
- Outcome: scripts, tasks, and recruitment criteria for user sessions.
- Action: write 3 realistic tasks, a short consent blurb, and success criteria.
-
Run rapid tests
- Outcome: actionable feedback within days.
- Action: test with 5–10 target users, record task completion, note friction points.
-
Iterate and decide
- Outcome: either pivot, persevere, or stop.
- Action: map feedback to backlog, retest high-impact changes, and decide based on predefined metrics.
Best practices
- Keep scope minimal: focus on the riskiest assumption.
- Prototype fidelity: use just enough fidelity to test the hypothesis—low for concept, high for interaction validation.
- Recruit real users: target the actual user segment, not convenient participants.
- Timebox iterations: 1–2 week cycles keep momentum.
- Document decisions: log learnings and metric outcomes after each test.
Common pitfalls
- Overbuilding nonessential features
- Testing with non-target users
- Ignoring qualitative feedback in favor of raw metrics
Quick checklist
- Problem statement ✅
- 2 success metrics ✅
- 3 core flows sketched ✅
- Prototype ready in Shape.Mvp ✅
- 5–10 user tests scheduled ✅
- Decision criteria defined ✅
Suggested next steps
- Run a 1-week sprint to produce a prototype covering the top user journey.
- Recruit 5 target users and run moderated sessions.
- Use results to update roadmap and prioritize next sprint.
Leave a Reply