Every comparison is sourced from real review data
We don't make this up. Every claim about The Mom Test 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
- Operationalizes The Mom Test as one of 9 forced decisions, with prompts you can take into real interviews
- Combines it with Van Westendorp, Jobs-to-be-Done, 7 Powers, Blue Ocean, and more in one flow
- Turns reading into doing: a verdict in about 2 minutes and a full playbook in 15 to 20
- Exports a build-ready spec to Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf, v0, Lovable, Replit, Gemini
- Returns a Don't Ship verdict on weak ideas (about 24%) so you don't interview your way into a sunk cost
- It's a tool, not the source material. The book's depth and nuance on interviewing is its own thing
- It frames the questions to ask, but you still have to go talk to real humans
- Costs money beyond the free tier; the book is a one-time, cheap read
The Mom Test
- The definitive, deeply explained method for honest customer conversations
- Cheap, portable, and re-readable. A genuine classic for founders
- Teaches judgment and intuition a tool can't fully encode
- A book teaches; it doesn't enforce. Reading it doesn't make you run the interviews
- Covers customer conversations, not pricing, MVP scope, positioning, or launch
- No structure to capture answers, score the idea, or produce a spec
- Easy to nod along, close the book, and change nothing
The real difference in one line
The Mom Test answers “how do I ask customers without fooling myself?” ShipFit answers “now go do that, plus eight other decisions, and ship.” The book teaches the method. The tool enforces the practice. You need both, and they don’t compete.
Read the book. Seriously.
This page is not telling you to skip The Mom Test. It’s the opposite. The book is foundational, cheap, and short, and ShipFit assumes you’ve internalized it. If you haven’t read it, read it. Our Mom Test framework page is a primer, not a replacement for Rob Fitzpatrick’s work.
The honest gap a book has is simple: a book teaches, it doesn’t enforce. Most founders read it, nod, and then walk into their next customer call and ask “would you use this?” anyway. Knowing the method and running the method are different skills.
Where ShipFit wins
ShipFit operationalizes the lesson and surrounds it with the rest of the job. It works for founders who:
- Have read the book and want a structure that makes them actually apply it
- Want Mom Test-style interview prompts handed to them per idea, not recalled from memory
- Need the eight decisions the book doesn’t cover: pricing via Van Westendorp, buyer and pain via Jobs-to-be-Done, positioning, MVP scope, launch
- Want a build-ready spec for Cursor, Claude Code, or Windsurf at the end, not just better instincts
Teaches vs operationalizes. What each one does
| Job | The Mom Test (book) | ShipFit |
|---|---|---|
| Teaches the interview method | Yes, definitively | Assumes you know it |
| Hands you per-idea questions | No | Yes |
| Enforces that you apply it | No | Yes, it’s a forced step |
| Covers pricing, scope, launch | No | Yes |
| Produces a verdict | No | Yes |
| Exports a build-ready spec | No | Yes |
Tradeoffs ShipFit will not sugarcoat
- It’s a tool, not the source. The book’s depth on judgment and nuance is its own value. ShipFit encodes the practical part, not the wisdom.
- It doesn’t run your interviews. It frames the questions; you still talk to humans. Anything claiming otherwise is selling snake oil.
- It costs more than a book. Beyond the free tier, you pay per use. The book is a one-time, cheap read. Different value, different price.
Tradeoffs the book won’t sugarcoat
- Reading isn’t doing. The most common failure mode is agreeing with every page and changing nothing.
- It’s narrow on purpose. Customer conversations only. Pricing, scope, positioning, and launch are out of scope, which is fine for a book but not for shipping a product.
- No capture, no scoring, no spec. You finish with principles, not a plan.
ShipFit is not the right fit if…
- You haven’t read The Mom Test yet. Read it first. ShipFit builds on it; it doesn’t replace it.
- You want the full theory and nuance. A 2-minute Quick Take won’t teach you interviewing the way 130 pages will. Use the book to learn, the tool to apply.
- You won’t actually talk to users. ShipFit and the book agree on this. No method and no software replaces real conversations.
The honest recommendation
Buy the book. Read it this weekend. Then bring an idea to a Quick Take and let ShipFit force you to apply what you just read, alongside the pricing, scope, and launch decisions the book leaves to you. The book makes you smarter. ShipFit makes you decide. Use them in that order.
Frequently asked questions
Is ShipFit a real Mom Test book alternative?
Does ShipFit talk to my customers for me?
Why use a tool if I've already read the book?
What frameworks does ShipFit use besides The Mom Test?
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.