Interviews, prototypes and the discipline of testing the riskiest assumption first.
It is tempting to treat this as a solved problem. Get close to the work, though, and you quickly find it is anything but.
The part most people skip
Every shortcut arrives with a bill attached. Sometimes it is worth paying — the real skill is knowing the price before you sign for it. This is the point where “Running product discovery that actually informs decisions” stops being a headline and starts becoming a practice.
- Write it down. A decision that lives only in someone’s head is a decision waiting to be relitigated.
- Start small. A focused first version beats an ambitious plan that never ships.
- Measure honestly. Vanity numbers feel reassuring and tell you almost nothing.
The goal was never to be busy. The goal was always to be effective.
Key takeaways
None of this is magic. It is attention, applied consistently, for a little longer than feels comfortable.