Summary – Without prior validation, a digital project ties up resources and risks strategic and financial failure. A pragmatic process combines Product Discovery and qualitative interviews to pinpoint the problem, surveys and scoring to prioritize needs, rapid prototyping (wireframes, landing pages, fake doors), and a concierge MVP or pre-sales to test desirability and viability, all backed by competitive intelligence to optimize positioning.
Solution: use these iterative methods to turn your hypotheses into solid data and launch development with confidence.
In a context where investing in a digital product can consume significant financial and human resources, the greatest risk lies not in technology but in strategy. Before committing tens or hundreds of thousands of euros to development, you need to confirm that the market genuinely wants your solution.
Testing an idea without coding helps align the product with a real need, significantly reduces financial risk, and avoids acting on unvalidated intuition. In this article, discover four pragmatic approaches—illustrated by real-world examples—to validate your digital concept before entering the development phase.
Validating the Problem with Product Discovery
Product Discovery identifies a genuinely painful problem before proposing a solution. It directs your efforts toward the users’ real needs.
Targeted Qualitative Interviews
Speaking directly with potential users remains the most effective way to understand deep-seated customer pain points. Whether face-to-face or via video conference, you capture nonverbal cues and gather precise anecdotes about their current workflows.
These exploratory interviews should remain open-ended and focused on tasks and pain points. The goal is to extract concrete use cases rather than validate your own solution hypothesis.
As you talk, note any in-house workarounds and improvised hacks: they’re strong indicators of unmet needs in existing offerings.
Quantitative Surveys
After initial interviews, a structured questionnaire lets you measure the problem’s scale across a broader sample. Closed questions assess frequency, perceived severity, and willingness to pay.
Distributed via a contact list or an existing landing page, surveys yield quantitative metrics. They help prioritize segments and calibrate the initial investment budget.
Problem Prioritization
Ranking identified needs by business impact (time savings, cost reduction, quality improvement) and occurrence frequency enables you to focus your discovery on the most critical points. A simple scoring system will distinguish “must-have” needs from “nice-to-have” ones.
Document each problem with a “pain score”—severity, frequency, and cumulative duration. This aligns stakeholders on the real stakes and minimizes misalignment.
This prioritization ensures your future solution addresses a validated need rather than an internal intuition, drastically reducing the risk of developing a secondary feature.
Rapid Prototyping and Initial Experience Tests
Simulating the user experience before coding allows you to validate ergonomics and concept appeal. Early feedback prevents costly technical rework.
Wireframes and Interactive Mockups
Using tools like Figma or Miro, create low-fidelity wireframes to structure user flows. Then enrich these mockups by emulating key interactions (clicks, forms, menus) with a no-code platform.
Test users navigate these prototypes as if they were the final product. Feedback focuses on element clarity, transition smoothness, and labeling relevance.
It’s an excellent lever to optimize UX before writing any code.
Validation Landing Page
Design a simple page presenting your value proposition, key benefits, and a call to action (sign-up, download a guide, pre-order). The goal is to measure message appeal and initial engagement.
By setting up A/B tests, you compare different headlines, visuals, and calls to action. Conversion rates and acquisition costs indicate whether the idea resonates with your target audience.
Example: A fintech company launched two landing pages for a budgeting dashboard. On the first, 1.2% of visitors submitted their email address; on the second, 5.8% did. This test showed that messaging focused on “gaining financial control” generated four times more interest, justifying continuation of the project.
Fake Door Testing
This technique involves promoting a non-existent feature to gauge genuine curiosity and intent. A simple “Discover this new feature” button is enough to measure click volume.
You can pair this with an omnichannel strategy of targeted ad campaigns. By analyzing click rates and cost per lead, you confront your promise with market reality.
If interaction rates are low despite a suitable audience, it’s a clear signal that the need isn’t strong enough or that positioning must be revised before any development phase.
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Concierge MVP and Project Economics Feedback
The Concierge MVP delivers a manual service before automating, allowing you to test business hypotheses. Evaluating the economic model then reveals willingness to pay.
Concierge MVP
Before building an algorithm or a complex platform, embrace a Concierge MVP approach to deliver the service manually. For example, matching clients and providers can be managed via a spreadsheet and a few email exchanges. This approach gives you a nuanced understanding of expectations, data formats, and real processing scenarios. You identify which steps are truly necessary and which can be eliminated.
The proof of concept shortens time to market and serves as tangible validation for your beta testers, all while limiting initial technical investment.
Pre-sales
Offer early access at a reduced rate or paid reservations even before the product is built. This method demonstrates commitment and trust from your first customers.
The pre-sale amount and the number of subscriptions are tangible indicators of your project’s financial viability. They help forecast initial revenue and adjust the roadmap.
Example: An HR service provider opened 50 pre-sales for an automated scheduling tool. The 15,000 CHF collected covered prototyping costs, proving that the market was willing to invest and the proposed price was acceptable.
Strategic Competitive Analysis
Study existing offerings, their pricing, limitations, and user reviews on marketplaces by conducting an effective competitive analysis. Identify frustrations or under-served features in current solutions.
This competitive monitoring informs your positioning: you can propose a differentiating pricing model (freemium, per-user license, à la carte subscription) or a more compelling product argument.
By combining these insights with your pre-sale results, you optimize the business model before launching large-scale development.
Measuring Value and Reducing Risk
These methods turn your hypotheses into concrete data, validating desirability, economic viability, and perceived feasibility before any development begins.
Testing Desirability
Desirability is gauged by the emotional and functional interest your proposition generates. Results from landing pages, fake doors, and qualitative interviews provide an initial indicator.
A high click-through rate on your landing page or a significant number of contacts signals that your message resonates and that users see real value in your offer.
This initial validation reduces the risk of launching a product that nobody wants by confirming your promise meets an actual need.
Testing Economic Viability
Beyond interest, you must verify that users are willing to pay. Pre-sales and implementing a test pricing structure on a limited sample provide signals about potential profitability.
You can also simulate different price levels to estimate demand elasticity and define your optimal pricing strategy.
Example: A software publisher offered three pricing tiers for an automated reporting module. Within two weeks, the mid-tier accounted for 70% of selections, validating both the pricing structure and the chargeable amount.
Testing Perceived Feasibility
Perceived feasibility measures whether your audience understands and values your solution. Tests on interactive mockups and interview feedback deliver this verdict.
You thus identify friction points, drop-off zones, and misunderstandings in the user journey. These insights guide adjustments before technical development.
This early check ensures the final product will be intuitive and widely adopted, avoiding costly fixes post-launch.
Build a Validated Conviction for Your Digital Product
Validating a concept without coding means transforming hypotheses into tangible data at every stage—from problem discovery to testing economic viability. Interviews, prototyping, attractiveness tests, and pre-sales structure your approach and drastically reduce the risk of failure.
Once the problem is confirmed, interest measured, and willingness to pay established, development begins on solid ground. You thereby build a roadmap driven by a shared and validated conviction.
Our experts are available to support you through these strategic validation phases: from defining interviews to activating pre-sales, through prototype creation and competitive analysis.







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