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Speed without direction doesn’t help.
In fact, it can make things worse.
Right now, more people than ever can build products.
AI tools are faster. Code is easier. Design is more accessible. So naturally, more people are building.
But here’s the problem.
A lot of people have a shovel… and no idea where to dig.
I’ve been seeing this more and more in conversations with builders.
They’re smart, motivated, and full of great ideas. They’ve got the tools and the energy, and they’re moving fast. But when you look a little closer, something is missing.
There are no users. No real conversations. No signal that what they’re building actually matters.
So they keep going. More features. More polish. More time invested.
It feels like progress, but it’s not.
It’s just digging.
When you skip users, you’re guessing. And guessing is expensive.
You end up with:
Worse, it can wear you down. You start to question your ideas, your skills, even your direction.
But the issue usually isn’t your ability to build.
It’s where you chose to dig.
You don’t need a big research budget or a fully built product. You just need access to real people and a willingness to learn.
Great products don’t start with building. They start with understanding.
Everyone is trying to move faster, ship faster, and do more with AI. And to be fair, the tools are incredible. They remove friction and make it easier than ever to bring ideas to life.
But speed without direction doesn’t help. In fact, it can make things worse.
Building feels productive because you can see it. You can share it. You can point to something and say, “I made this.”
Talking to users is different. It’s slower. It’s messy. It can be uncomfortable. You might hear things you don’t want to hear.
So people skip it. They build first and ask questions later.
This is where most early-stage builders get stuck, and it’s a big part of what we focus on in our Product Launch Intensive. Before you scale anything, you need clarity on who it’s for and why it matters.

You don’t need a big research budget or a fully built product. You just need access to real people and a willingness to learn.
Have an idea for a dating app? ⮕ Go to a bar and talk to people.
Building for designers? ⮕ Post in online design communities.
Working on a B2B tool? ⮕ Message five people on LinkedIn.
Ask simple questions:
Then take what you learn and build the smallest version possible.
Test it.
Refine it.
Repeat.
This loop is everything.
And again, this is a core part of how we help people move from idea to traction inside the Product Launch Intensive. It’s not about building more. It’s about building the right thing.
You can start today with almost no cost.
Simple guerrilla testing checklist:
Keep it simple. Keep it fast. Keep it real.
It’s not about what’s next. It’s about what’s first.
And what’s first is the market, the users, and the problem.
When you start there, your product gets sharper, your decisions get easier, and your progress becomes real.
You’re not just digging anymore.
You’re digging in the right place.
If you’re feeling stuck in builder mode, you’re not alone. Most people hit this point.
At Big Nerd, we help founders and designers validate ideas, test with real users, and launch products with clarity and confidence.
If you want a faster path to something people actually want, check out our services:
👉 https://bignerd.design/services/
You don’t need a bigger shovel.
You just need a better place to dig.