What's breaking you right now
- Your pricing model isn't a guess you can fix later. In recurring revenue, the wrong model (seat vs usage vs tier) shapes everything downstream and is brutal to change post-launch.
- A fuzzy ICP means churn you can't explain. If you don't know exactly who should be paying monthly, you'll acquire users who cancel and never know why.
- You're optimizing acquisition before you've proven retention. Pouring spend into a leaky bucket is the classic early SaaS death.
- Feature requests pull you in ten directions and your roadmap becomes whoever shouted loudest, not what reduces churn or expands accounts.
- You priced off competitors or gut feel, not willingness to pay, so you're either leaving money on the table or scaring off the buyer.
How ShipFit helps
Pressure-test the pricing model, not just the number
The pricing stage uses Van Westendorp to find a defensible price range and surfaces whether seat, usage, or tier pricing fits your value metric. In SaaS the model matters more than the digits, and it's expensive to change after launch.
Nail the ICP before you spend on acquisition
The buyer stage forces a specific paying segment using Jobs-to-be-Done. A precise ICP is the difference between recurring revenue and a parade of users who churn in month two.
Validate retention logic, not just signups
The pain and v1 stages make you name the recurring problem your product solves every month. If the pain isn't recurring, neither is the revenue, and ShipFit flags that early.
Scope a v1 that proves the subscription thesis
Run the What's in v1 decision to cut your build to the one thing that proves people will pay again, not the full roadmap. Export it to Cursor, Lovable, or v0.
Sanity-check the whole thesis in 20 minutes
Run the full 9-question playbook (~15-20 min) before committing a quarter of build. About 24% of ideas return a Don't Ship verdict. Better to learn that before you've onboarded customers you can't keep.
Why SaaS founders, specifically
SaaS punishes early mistakes more than any other model because the mistakes recur. A one-time product gets one transaction wrong and moves on. A subscription compounds the wrong ICP, the wrong price, and the wrong value metric into every monthly cohort. By the time churn tells you something is off, you’ve built a base on the wrong foundation. The cheapest place to fix a SaaS mistake is before launch, in the decisions, not in the dashboard.
The SaaS validation problem in 40 words
In recurring revenue, your earliest decisions (who pays, what model, what recurring problem) keep charging you every month. Get the ICP or pricing model wrong and you don’t lose one sale, you build a subscription nobody renews. Forcing those decisions first is the leverage.
Where SaaS founders lose, and which decision catches it
| Failure mode | Symptom later | ShipFit decision that catches it |
|---|---|---|
| Fuzzy ICP | Unexplained churn | Buyer (Jobs-to-be-Done) |
| Wrong pricing model | Hard-to-reverse re-pricing, lost expansion | Pricing (Van Westendorp) |
| Non-recurring pain | Users solve it once and leave | Pain decision |
| Bloated v1 | Slow launch, no clear thesis | What’s in v1 |
| Weak positioning | High CAC, no moat | Positioning (7 Powers) |
How it fits your workflow
- Run a Quick Take on the idea or the new segment. ~2 minutes. Confirm the recurring thesis is plausible before you build.
- Run the full 9-question playbook. ~15-20 minutes. Lock the ICP, the pricing model, and the recurring pain.
- Use the pricing stage output to choose seat vs usage vs tier, grounded in willingness to pay, not competitor copying.
- Scope v1 to the one thing that proves people pay again. Export to Cursor, Lovable, or v0.
- Take the Mom Test questions to real buyers and watch renewal behavior, not just signups.
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 build a subscription on the wrong ICP. See pricing for current plans.
Frameworks you’ll use
- Van Westendorp pricing. For a defensible price and the right recurring model.
- Jobs to be Done. For an ICP precise enough to retain.
- The Mom Test. For discovery that predicts renewals, not just polite interest.
Not the right fit if…
- You’re past product-market fit and purely scaling acquisition. This is a pre-PMF decision tool, not a growth platform.
- You want churn-prevention tooling like dunning and save flows. ShipFit fixes the validation-stage causes of churn, not the operational ones.
- You just want to brainstorm casually. Try Buildpad instead.
Frequently asked questions
Why does pricing matter so much more for SaaS validation?
Can ShipFit help with retention, or just the initial idea?
I already have a few paying customers. Is this still useful?
How long does it take and what does it cost?
Does this replace talking to my customers?
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.