I’ve been thinking about how much design quality actually matters in the earliest stages of a product.
Some users don’t seem to mind rough edges if the tool genuinely solves a problem. Others instantly bounce if the UI doesn’t feel “trustworthy.”
As founders, we often obsess over every pixel but maybe early adopters just want momentum and clarity.
What’s your take?
Would you rather ship a rough MVP fast or delay for a polished first impression?
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yes..it should start from the beginning from the design and work immediately because it is an experiment that we create according to the strategy we want
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really depends on where the product is being positioned. If it's a completely new product category with no competitors and fulfiles a dire need, I don't think the UI needs to be super polished. Users will be desperate enough to ignore UI. But if its a pre-existing category and incumbents have a polished UI, then its table-stakes.
This question is great! I think they do not consciously care about design, but great design keeps them finding the functionality. A bit like in a restaurant. How the food is served and looks actually does matter. In German, we would say: "Das Auge isst mit." -> word by word translation - (The eye eats with)
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Depends, if the workflows and tasks are smooth I think people will ignore a less than beautiful UI, no problem. I have, however, tried to use some new apps that I really wanted to like (a cool device sim dev tool comes to mind) but were too confusing to use, so I gave up. The key word there is clarity. I think I'm not alone in preferring a smooth but low-fi experience over a beautiful but wonky one. UX is not just UI visual design, etc.
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really depends on where the product is being positioned. If it's a completely new product category with no competitors and fulfiles a dire need, I don't think the UI needs to be super polished. Users will be desperate enough to ignore UI. But if its a pre-existing category and incumbents have a polished UI, then its table-stakes.
Needle
This question is great! I think they do not consciously care about design, but great design keeps them finding the functionality. A bit like in a restaurant. How the food is served and looks actually does matter. In German, we would say: "Das Auge isst mit." -> word by word translation - (The eye eats with)
Depends, if the workflows and tasks are smooth I think people will ignore a less than beautiful UI, no problem. I have, however, tried to use some new apps that I really wanted to like (a cool device sim dev tool comes to mind) but were too confusing to use, so I gave up. The key word there is clarity. I think I'm not alone in preferring a smooth but low-fi experience over a beautiful but wonky one. UX is not just UI visual design, etc.