For AI startup founders

For AI founders whose demo is great and whose buyer is unknown

A slick LLM demo gets applause and a waitlist. It doesn't prove anyone will pay, or that you have anything a competitor can't ship in a weekend. ShipFit forces the buyer, the pain, and the moat decisions before you burn months on a thin wrapper.

What's breaking you right now

  • Your demo is magic and your business is undefined. A working prototype proves the model works, not that a buyer exists or that the problem was painful enough to pay for.
  • Thin-wrapper risk is real. If your product is a prompt and a UI over a frontier model, the model vendor or a competitor can replicate it fast. You need to know where the actual moat is, or admit there isn't one.
  • Inference and token costs are not free. You can ship something people love and lose money on every query if the willingness to pay doesn't clear the unit economics.
  • AI moves the goalposts monthly. The next model release can absorb your whole feature, so 'it's hard to build today' is not a durable advantage.
  • Everyone is building AI for everything. 'AI for X' is not positioning. Without a specific buyer and a real wedge, you're one of forty teams pitching the same demo.

How ShipFit helps

1

Find the buyer behind the demo

The buyer stage uses Jobs-to-be-Done to force one specific paying segment. AI founders fall in love with the capability and skip the buyer. This catches that before you've shipped a demo with no one to sell it to.

2

Stress-test the moat before you assume one

The positioning stage applies 7 Powers and Blue Ocean to ask what actually defends this if the next model release commoditizes the hard part. If the only moat is 'we built it first,' ShipFit will say so.

3

Check willingness to pay against inference cost

The pricing stage uses Van Westendorp to find a defensible price. For AI products that price has to clear your token and inference costs, or you're subsidizing every user. Better to learn that before scale.

4

Scope a v1 that proves demand, not just capability

Use the What's in v1 decision to cut to the one workflow a buyer would pay for, not the full agentic vision. Export the spec to Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf, or v0 and build against a thesis.

5

Get an honest verdict on the whole thesis

Run the full 9-question playbook (~15-20 min). About 24% of ideas return a Don't Ship verdict. For AI ideas, that's often the wrapper with no buyer and no moat, caught before the seed round, not after.

Why AI founders, specifically

Because AI gives you the most seductive false signal in startups: a demo that works. A working prototype feels like traction, so the hard commercial questions (who pays, why they keep paying, what stops a competitor) get deferred. Meanwhile the cost of being wrong is rising, because the next model release can absorb your whole feature and reset the field. The cheapest place to find out your wrapper has no buyer and no moat is before the seed round, in the decisions, not in the burn.

The AI validation problem in 40 words

A great LLM demo proves the model, not the business. The traps are specific: a buyer who never appears, a moat that evaporates at the next release, and a price that won’t cover inference. ShipFit forces those exact decisions before you build the wrapper.

Where AI ideas lose, and which decision catches it

Failure modeSymptom laterShipFit decision that catches it
Demo with no buyerWaitlist, no revenueBuyer (Jobs-to-be-Done)
Thin wrapper, no moatCommoditized by next model releasePositioning (7 Powers, Blue Ocean)
Price below inference costLoss on every queryPricing (Van Westendorp)
“AI for everything” scopeNo clear wedge, slow to shipWhat’s in v1
Capability mistaken for demandLoved, not paid forBehavioral validation

How it fits your workflow

  1. You have a demo. Run a Quick Take on the actual business idea. ~2 minutes. Decide if there’s a buyer worth chasing.
  2. If it survives, run the full 9-question playbook. ~15-20 minutes. Force the buyer, the moat, and the price.
  3. Use the positioning stage to name the wedge that survives the next model release, or admit there isn’t one.
  4. Scope v1 to the one workflow a buyer would pay for. Export to Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf, or v0.
  5. Take the Mom Test questions to real buyers and watch behavior, not demo reactions.

Start with Quick Take

Free tier: 3 credits/month. Paid: $5 for a one-off Quick Take, $10 for a full playbook. Validate your business idea before you ship a wrapper with no buyer. See pricing for current plans.

Frameworks you’ll use

Not the right fit if…

  • You’re a research lab proving a model, not building a product to sell. This validates commercial bets, not model performance.
  • You already have paying customers and a clear moat and you’re scaling. This is a pre-PMF decision tool, not a growth platform.
  • You just want to brainstorm AI ideas casually. Try Buildpad instead.

Frequently asked questions

I have a working AI demo people love. Why do I need validation?
Because a demo proves the model can do the thing, not that a buyer will pay for it or that you can defend it. Most AI startups die from no buyer or no moat, not from a broken prototype. ShipFit forces the buyer, pain, pricing, and positioning decisions the demo lets you skip.
How does ShipFit assess thin-wrapper or moat risk?
The positioning stage runs 7 Powers and Blue Ocean against your idea and asks what survives if the underlying model commoditizes your hard part. If the only advantage is being early or having a nice prompt, you'll get a Needs Major Pivot or Don't Ship signal. That's the point.
Does it understand AI unit economics?
It forces the willingness-to-pay decision via Van Westendorp, which is what determines whether your price clears inference and token costs. ShipFit won't model your exact margins, but it stops you building a product whose buyers won't pay enough to cover the queries.
How long does it take and what does it cost?
Quick Take is ~2 minutes, the full playbook ~15-20 minutes. Free tier covers 3 credits/month. Paid packs start at $5 for a Quick Take, $10 for a full playbook. Check current pricing on the app.
Does this replace talking to users?
No. ShipFit makes sure you ask the right questions (see the Mom Test) and don't mistake demo applause for purchase intent, but you still have to put it in front of real buyers and watch what they actually do.
Related on ShipFit

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Q&A
How do you validate a business idea?

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 founders
indie hackers

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.

Comparison
Buildpad

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.

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