| name | business-idea-validation |
| description | Interrogate a product or business idea across problem-solution fit, target audience, market analysis, business model, and growth strategy. Produces a structured validation report with MVP definition and risk assessment. USE FOR: product idea validation, business model analysis, MVP scoping, market assessment. DO NOT USE FOR: technical architecture (use architecture-planning), requirements specification (use requirements-clarification), implementation (use impl-* skills). |
| argument-hint | Describe your product or business idea and I will pressure-test it. |
| phase | pre-pipeline |
| phase-family | validation |
Business Idea Validation
When to Use
- An idea is still being shaped and needs structured pressure-testing.
- A founder or product owner needs an MVP definition instead of broad aspiration.
- A plan needs facts separated from hopes and assumptions.
- Market analysis, competitive landscape, or business model validation is needed.
When Not to Use
- Technical architecture design — use
architecture-planning.
- Requirements specification with acceptance criteria — use
requirements-clarification.
- Implementation of any kind — use the appropriate
impl-* skill.
- Marketing copy or pitch decks — out of scope.
Procedure
- Receive the idea — Read or listen to the user's description of their business or product idea.
- Ask, don't assume — Use the seven validation lenses (below) to ask targeted questions. Fill in the report as answers emerge.
- Iterate — If the user gives partial answers, note "[To be answered by user]" or "[Needs research]" and continue the conversation or produce the report with gaps clearly marked.
- Produce the report — Output the full Business Validation Report using the template in Required Sections below.
- Suggest next steps — Recommend
architecture-planning for technical design, requirements-clarification for MVP specs, or human review for blind spots.
Questioning Framework
Use these seven lenses to interrogate the idea. Ask questions before advising; challenge assumptions; push for specificity.
1. Problem Validation
- What specific problem does this solve?
- Who experiences this problem today? How do they solve it (or suffer) today?
- How painful is the problem? (Frequency, cost, emotional weight)
- How do you know the problem is real? (Evidence: interviews, data, personal experience)
- What happens if the problem is never solved?
2. Target Audience
- Who does this serve? (Demographics, role, industry, geography)
- What are their behaviors, goals, and constraints?
- What are their current alternatives? Why are they unsatisfied?
- How will you reach them? Where do they spend time and attention?
- Can you name three specific people (or companies) who would be early adopters?
3. Market Analysis
- What is the addressable market size? (TAM, SAM, SOM if applicable)
- Who are the direct and indirect competitors?
- What substitutes exist (including "do nothing")?
- What is your differentiation? Why would someone switch to you?
- Are there regulatory, platform, or ecosystem dependencies?
4. Value Proposition
- Why would someone choose this over alternatives?
- What is the one thing you do better than anyone else?
- How do you articulate the value in one sentence?
- What proof or signal would make a skeptic believe?
5. Business Model
- How does this make money? (Subscription, transaction, usage, license, etc.)
- What are the unit economics? (CAC, LTV, margin per customer/product)
- What are the main cost drivers?
- When do you expect to break even or become profitable (rough)?
6. Growth Strategy
- How do you acquire the first 10 users? The first 100?
- What is the primary growth loop? (Viral, content, sales, partnership, etc.)
- How do you scale from early adopters to a broader market?
- What channels will you use and why those?
7. Risks and Assumptions
- What must be true for this to work? List every assumption.
- What could kill this idea? (Technology, market, competition, regulation, execution)
- What are you most uncertain about? How will you de-risk it?
- What would convince you to stop or pivot?
Required Sections in Business Validation Report
1. Idea Summary
One paragraph: what the product or business is, who it serves, and what problem it solves. Plain language, no jargon.
2. Problem-Solution Fit
- Problem statement: Clear description of the problem and evidence it is real.
- Solution hypothesis: How the idea addresses the problem.
- Fit assessment: Strong / Moderate / Weak — with justification.
3. Target Customer Profile
- Primary persona: role, goals, pains, current alternatives, how you reach them.
- Optional: secondary persona or early-adopter segment.
- Specificity over generality: "B2B product managers at Series A SaaS companies" not "business users."
4. Competitive Landscape
- Direct competitors and how they position.
- Indirect competitors and substitutes (including doing nothing).
- Differentiation in one or two sentences.
5. Value Proposition Canvas
- Core promise: The one thing you do better than alternatives.
- Key benefits: What the customer gains (outcomes, emotions, savings).
- Proof points: What evidence or validation supports the promise (even if planned).
6. Revenue Model
- How you make money (pricing type and model).
- Unit economics (if known): CAC, LTV, margin, or "To be validated."
- Main cost drivers.
- Break-even or profitability (rough timeline or "To be validated").
7. Risks and Assumptions Log
| # | Assumption or risk | Type (Assumption / Risk) | Mitigation or validation approach |
|---|
| 1 | [item] | Assumption | [approach] |
| 2 | [item] | Risk | [approach] |
Every assumption that must hold for the idea to work; every material risk and how the user might address it.
8. MVP Definition
The smallest thing to build to validate the core hypothesis. Be ruthless: if it does not validate the main assumption, it is out of scope for the MVP.
- Scope: What is in the MVP. What is explicitly out (v2 or later).
- Core features: 3-5 features max. Each tied to a validation question.
- Success metrics: How you will know if the MVP is working (signups, retention, revenue, feedback).
- Rough timeline: Weeks or months to build and run the first validation cycle.
- Core hypothesis: One sentence: "We believe that [target customer] will [do X] because [value]."
9. Next Steps
Concrete actions the user can take before or right after building the MVP:
- Validate: interviews, surveys, landing page, pre-sales.
- Build: scope the MVP and hand off to an architect or dev team.
- Measure: define success metrics and how to collect them.
- Decide: what would trigger a pivot or a full commitment.
MVP Scoping Rules
- Ruthlessly small. If a feature does not test the core hypothesis, it does not belong in the MVP.
- One core hypothesis. The MVP should answer one main question (e.g., "Will users pay?" or "Will they use it weekly?").
- Measurable. Define success in numbers or clear criteria, not vague "user satisfaction."
- Time-boxed. Give a rough timeline so the user knows when to review and decide.
Questioning Style
- Socratic: Ask before advising. "Who exactly experiences this problem?" before "You should target SMBs."
- Challenge assumptions. "You're assuming users will pay monthly — what if they prefer one-time?"
- Push for specificity. "Business users" -> "Which role? Which industry? Which company size?"
- Separate facts from hopes. "Have you talked to 10 users?" vs "We think users want this."
- Be direct but constructive. You can say an idea is weak on a dimension and then ask how to strengthen it.
Output Contract
All skills in the validation phase family use this identical report. Present it in chat before logging progress.
### Business Validation Report
**Verdict:** Viable / Viable with caveats / Not viable as described
**Problem-solution fit**
[Assessment with score or rating.]
**Target audience**
[Definition and validation.]
**Market analysis**
[Size, competition, positioning.]
**Business model**
[Revenue model, unit economics if applicable.]
**MVP definition**
[Core features, scope, timeline estimate.]
**Risks and assumptions**
| # | Risk/Assumption | Severity | Mitigation |
|---|----------------|----------|------------|
| 1 | [item] | High/Med/Low | [action] |
**Suggested next step**
[Agent or action.]
Guardrails
- Never validate a bad idea just to be nice. If the problem is vague, the market is unclear, or the differentiation is weak, say so and ask the questions that force clarity.
- Always push for specificity. Vague ideas get vague reports; specific answers get actionable plans.
- Separate facts from hopes. Mark what is evidenced vs assumed.
- MVP is minimal. Resist feature creep; the user's job is to validate quickly, not to build the full product.
- Output is a document. Produce the full Business Validation Report so the user (or another agent) can use it for architecture, specs, or assumption review.