Validate App Idea
- TecHook

- Feb 1
- 2 min read

Most founders, myself included, get excited about an idea and jump straight into building.
But before you write a single line of code, there are a few questions you should honestly answer.
These questions can save you months of wasted work.
1. Is It a Need or a Want?
Need → Can drive organic traffic
Want → Requires heavy marketing and paid acquisition
If your product solves a real, urgent problem, people will naturally search for it.
If it’s a “nice-to-have,” expect to spend significantly more time and money convincing users why they need it.
This one question alone can determine whether your product grows organically or struggles to get attention.
2. How Long Does It Take to Understand?
If it takes more than 10 seconds to explain what your product does, you’re already at a disadvantage.
The longer it takes to understand:
The harder it is to sell
The more education is required
The higher your customer acquisition cost
Simple products win.
If people need a full explanation before they “get it,” expect friction.
3. How Are Your Competitors Doing?
Having competitors is actually a good thing.
It means:
There is demand
The market is validated
People are already paying
But too many competitors usually means:
High ad costs
Feature saturation
Little differentiation
The key is balance.
Study what competitors are doing wrong, what users complain about, and what they’re missing, especially in their marketing and social content.
4. How Many Search Intents Exist?
This is one of the most overlooked factors.
For example:
“VPN” → extremely competitive
“Burner phone” → multiple entry points
Think about how many ways people could search for your product:
Second phone number
Work number
Temporary number
Burner number
Business line
More search intents = more chances for organic discovery.
If your product only has one obvious keyword, growth will be much harder.
5. Is It Easy to Replicate?
If your idea can be cloned in a weekend, you don’t have much leverage.
Strong products usually have:
Domain knowledge
Infrastructure complexity
Operational difficulty
Distribution advantage
If it’s just “vibe coding,” it’s a hobby! not a business!
You’re not trying to build an app!
You’re trying to build something defensible!
6. What’s the “Aha” Moment?
Every great product has one.
It’s the moment where the user says:
“Oh… that’s actually really cool.”
It should be:
Visual
Easy to demonstrate
Understandable in under 10 seconds
If you can’t show it clearly in a short video, it’s probably too complicated.
Final Thought
Most founders get excited and start building immediately.
Instead:
Answer these questions
Walk away for a week
Come back and read your answers again
If it still feels like a strong idea, then build it.
That pause alone can save you months of wasted effort.



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