Every comparison is sourced from real review data
We don't make this up. Every claim about idea validators is sourced from public review sites (Reddit, G2, Trustpilot, App Store, Play Store, Capterra) and verified against the competitor's own changelog.
The competition
How they fail their users
| Feature | Gorgias | Tidio | You |
|---|---|---|---|
| TrustScore 2.5/5 on Trustpilot (143 reviews) | |||
| Interface overwhelming for non-power users | |||
| Pricing scales painfully with ticket volume |
Gorgias
$50/mo · Starter plan
gorgias.com“Support tickets pile up during peak hours and the AI suggestions miss context.”
trustpilot.com · 143 reviewsShipFit
- Produces a build-ready playbook (buyer, pain, positioning, MVP scope, pricing, launch), not just a number
- 9 forced sequential decisions you defend one at a time, each grounded in a named framework
- Frameworks are explicit and citable: The Mom Test, Van Westendorp, Jobs-to-be-Done, 7 Powers, Lean Startup, ICE
- Verdict tiers are actionable: Promising, Promising Needs Focus, Needs Major Pivot, Don't Ship
- Exports a spec to Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf, v0, Lovable, Replit, Gemini
- Takes more effort than a one-shot grader: about 2 minutes for a Quick Take, 15 to 20 for the full playbook
- Opinionated and blunt. If you wanted a reassuring high score, the verdict can sting
- It frames the hypotheses to test with users, it doesn't run the interviews for you
idea validators
- Fast: paste an idea, get a score or grade in seconds
- Low effort and low commitment, good for a quick gut check across many ideas
- Often free or cheap to try
- A score is a number, not a plan. It rarely tells you what to actually change
- Scoring logic is often opaque, so it's hard to trust or argue with the result
- No buyer, pricing, MVP scope, or launch plan comes out the other side
- Easy to game by rewording the input until the score goes up
The real difference in one line
Idea validators answer “how good is this idea, on a scale?” ShipFit answers “what do I do about it?” A score is a starting point. A playbook is what you act on. The trap is treating a number as if it were a decision.
When idea validators genuinely win
A fast grader earns its keep at the very top of the funnel. It’s the right tool when you:
- Have a long list of ideas and want to triage quickly before investing real time
- Want a cheap, low-commitment gut check
- Just need a rough sense of whether something is worth a closer look
For that job, paste, score, move on. It’s fast and it’s fine.
Where ShipFit wins
ShipFit is for after the gut check, when you’ve picked an idea and need to decide what to do with it. It works for founders who:
- Want a buyer, a price, an MVP scope, and a launch plan, not a number
- Want each decision grounded in a named framework like The Mom Test, Van Westendorp, or Jobs-to-be-Done
- Want a spec they can paste into Cursor, Claude Code, or Windsurf and start building
- Are tired of vague encouragement and want a verdict they can act on
A score vs a playbook. What you actually get
| You get | Idea validator | ShipFit |
|---|---|---|
| A number or grade | Yes | Yes (as a side effect) |
| Named buyer persona | No | Yes |
| Pricing model (Van Westendorp) | No | Yes |
| MVP scope decision | No | Yes |
| Launch plan | No | Yes |
| Citable frameworks behind the call | Rarely | Yes |
| Build-ready export to coding tools | No | Yes |
| Time to result | Seconds | About 2 to 20 minutes |
Tradeoffs ShipFit will not sugarcoat
- It takes more effort than a one-shot grader. Two minutes for a Quick Take, 15 to 20 for the full playbook. That’s the price of a plan instead of a number.
- The verdict can sting. About 24% of ideas get a Don’t Ship. If you wanted a reassuring high score, brace yourself.
- It doesn’t interview your users. It frames the hypotheses; you still have to test them with real people.
Tradeoffs idea validators won’t sugarcoat
- Opaque scoring. If you can’t see why you got the number, you can’t trust it or argue with it.
- Gameable. Reword the input, watch the score climb. That’s not validation, that’s flattery.
- No plan attached. A high score with no buyer, price, or scope still leaves you exactly where you started.
ShipFit is not the right fit if…
- You only want a fast triage pass over many ideas. A lightweight grader is genuinely better for that. Come back with the shortlist.
- You want the number to be high no matter what. ShipFit returns Don’t Ship and Needs Major Pivot on ideas that fail the checks. It’s not in the business of flattery.
- You won’t talk to real users. No tool, score or playbook, replaces customer conversations. ShipFit sharpens them, it doesn’t run them.
The honest recommendation
If you’re comparing idea validator alternatives, you’ve probably already had a score and found it hollow. Run your strongest idea through a Quick Take for $5. Worst case you learn the number was lying to you. Best case you leave with a buyer, a price, and a plan you can actually build from.
Frequently asked questions
What are the best idea validator alternatives if I want a plan, not a score?
Is a high idea validation score worth anything?
How is ShipFit different from a grader?
Can I use a validator to triage and ShipFit to go deep?
Keep exploring
The 9-step playbook from market verdict to ship-ready spec.
The Mom Test is Rob Fitzpatrick's framework for customer interviews that generate real signal. Not praise. Three rules, applied step-by-step, with examples.
The Van Westendorp framework uses 4 questions to surface a defensible price range for any product. Here's how to run it, interpret results, and avoid the cheapest mistakes.
Most founder market research is a TAM slide that nobody believes. The numbers that actually matter are smaller, harder to defend, and tell you whether the market exists for the ten-customer version of your business.
Most founders confuse idea validation with idea-receiving-encouragement. The two have nothing in common. Here's what real validation looks like, and the four methods that actually produce it.
Does each customer make you money? Or cost you money?
Run nine framework-backed decisions in order before writing code: define the buyer, prove the pain is painful, name the winning angle, scope V1 to the smallest test of the hypothesis, get behavioral evidence (paid pre-orders, signed letters of intent, or credit cards on file from a Fake Door Test), then ship. Most failed startups skipped at least three of those nine. Plan to spend two to four weeks on this. It saves six to nine months of building the wrong thing.
For indie hackers who've wasted months on dead ideas. ShipFit forces 9 decisions before you write a line of code. Proven frameworks, exports to Cursor.
If you want a conversation partner, Buildpad. If you want to stop researching and ship, ShipFit. Both solve different problems for different founders. Don't pick on hype.
Ready to make your next product a success?
9 decisions between your idea and a product worth building.