The art and science of building great products with minimum resources as practiced by companies like Twitter, Dropbox, Airbnb, and Buffer among others.
- Real-life examples of MVP success and failure; - Advice on applying MVP thinking in lean and agile environments; - Experts' take on balancing between resource minimalism and business viability.
A quick, practical, actionable read on building MVP's. Borrows heavily from lots of existing sources, so the book feels like an MVP itself, but it works very well, as those sources lend it credibility and serve as wonderful examples. Only downside is the book tends to repeat itself a little bit and is really built to sell the UXPin product, but if you can ignore the marketing message, there is definitely a lot of useful material here.
"The MVP is more than a product, it's a way of thinking."
It’s got good tips on how to build a successful MVP, with examples from successful digital businesses. It’s useful, informative, easy to read, but I feel like pages 8-64 could have been about 15 pages instead of almost 60.
The guys from UXPin have done a really great job at compiling vast amount of knowledge and perspectives regarding building MVPs, the purpose that they serve as well as respectful amount of examples of MVPs in action. Great work!