Pricing Tiers is offering multiple versions of your product at different price points, usually called Free, Pro, and Enterprise (or similar). Each tier adds more features. Three tiers work best because the middle option becomes the most popular choice, a psychological pricing trick.
Offering multiple versions of your product at different price points, usually called Free, Pro, and Enterprise (or similar). Each tier adds more features. Three tiers work best because the middle option becomes the most popular choice, a psychological pricing trick.
The simplest version of your product that still solves the core problem. Ship fast, learn from real users, then improve. Don't build everything at once.
A small test to prove an idea actually works before investing serious time or money. It's not a product—it's evidence that building the product makes sense.
A working model of your product used for testing and feedback. It doesn't need to be pretty or complete—it needs to let people interact with your idea.
A basic sketch showing the layout and structure of a page without any design polish. Think blueprint, not finished building. It's about where things go, not how they look.
A high-fidelity visual design showing exactly how the final product will look. Unlike wireframes, mockups include colors, typography, and real content.