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As a software engineer turned entrepreneur, it took me a while to break the hacker mentality.
Just because you can build something doesnât mean you should.
This took me a while to learn. I figured competitors didnât offer the functionality because they hadnât thought of it or they werenât capable of building it, but, chances are, they didnât build it because no one wanted it or it was too far from the core product.
Itâs easy to get stuck in this mindset, âmaybe once I make this one feature, then the product will take off.â Daniel Tawfik described this as the startup tarpit.
Someone recently asked me how I decide on what feature I build nextâââa great question that I didnât have a great answer to.
I set out to build a scoring system.
- Relevance / Reachâââhow many customers will this benefit? How many people have requested this feature?
- UrgencyâââIs it a blocking feature?
- Difficultyâââhow long will it take to build?
- Innovationâââis it unique and innovative?
With this new scoring system, I triaged all of the pending features/ideas.
Representing the features and scores as a web graph helps to visualize and make the decision easier. Here are a few of them:
Link Shortening vs. Impression Analytics vs. Auto Scheduling
How do you decide what features you work on next? Does it change as your team grows?
Break the Hacker Mindset was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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