42% of startups fail to find demand, and 29% run out of money before a working model emerges
Most of the time, both numbers come from the same story: the team spent too long building before validating what users actually need and what they are willing to pay for.
When there is no clear logic — what you are building, for whom, and why — the product gets built blindly. Features show up as internal compromises, not as steps toward growth.
Sprints get completed, releases ship, but you are not getting any closer to product-market fit. Instead of metrics growing, you end up in endless rework, your team budget goes to zero, and you have nothing to show an investor except time spent.
And at that point, most founders speed up development — even though something else is what actually needs to speed up…
A startup’s real speed is how fast the team can answer one question: do people understand the product’s value and are they willing to pay for it?
That is where design measurably changes the pace.
McKinsey, using data from 300 public companies over five years, showed that companies with strong design grow faster and deliver higher returns to investors.
MVP
Design gives you a prototype before development. You can show it to users and investors and quickly validate the one thing that matters most: whether the value is coming through and whether willingness to pay shows up, while the cost of being wrong is still minimal.
Development
Well-designed flows, states, and edge cases reduce unnecessary rework and give the team a clear implementation plan. IBM Systems Sciences Institute estimated that fixes after launch can cost up to 100 times more than fixing things at the design stage.
Go-to-market for the US, EU, and UAE
Trust forms in seconds. The value and the next step must be obvious immediately, or your first-touch conversion drops and customer acquisition cost goes up.
When you quickly learn whether people are willing to pay for your product, growth follows and fundraising becomes easier. When you do not, your runway gets burned on rework and experiments you could have run cheaper and earlier.
If you are working on an MVP, launching, redesigning, or building a new product, drop your stage and market in the comments. We will break down where design will truly speed you up — and where it will be unnecessary.