You have an idea, but the scope keeps growing
You do not yet know what truly belongs in version one and what only increases cost and delivery time.
MVP audit
This checklist helps you assess quickly whether your MVP idea is ready for a realistic estimate and implementation. Instead of guessing whether the feature list makes sense, you go through the questions that structure scope, risks, integrations, and key decisions before delivery starts.
You do not yet know what truly belongs in version one and what only increases cost and delivery time.
You need a stronger brief before asking for a proposal, estimate, or technology decision.
Scope, admin panel, integrations, and edge cases are expanding faster than the budget.
Entry packages
Each package is designed to turn an unclear idea, unstable project, or automation opportunity into a concrete scope, decision, and next implementation step. The ranges below are practical starting budgets, not a promise that a larger build will fit inside the package price.
Recommended first step
For founders and teams that need to move from idea to a realistic first release.
Scope workshop, MVP backlog, architecture decisions, risk map, release plan, and implementation estimate.
For products that already exist, but delivery, scope, quality, or ownership is getting unclear.
Technical and product review, key risks, stabilization priorities, and a short recovery roadmap.
For companies that need systems, APIs, payments, CRM, ERP, or SaaS tools to work together reliably.
One critical flow, integration contract, edge cases, implementation plan, and rollout checklist.
For teams that want to test AI or automation on a real workflow without turning it into a large program.
Use case diagnosis, data/process review, pilot scope, risk notes, and next-step implementation path.
No. These are entry packages. They help define scope, risks, architecture, and the next step before estimating a larger build.
If you are building a new product, start with MVP Kickstart. If you already have a project in motion and need clarity, start with Rescue Audit. For one concrete process, choose Integration Sprint or AI / Automation Pilot.
Whether you know the exact problem, for whom you are solving it, and how you will tell if the MVP makes business sense.
Whether you can separate critical features from items that should wait or can stay manual at the beginning.
Whether the data, external systems, edge cases, budget constraints, and decision maker are clearly named.
Outcome
If several key questions still end with “we do not know yet”, “we will define it later”, or “we will see during delivery”, then a full implementation estimate will mostly be guesswork. A short audit helps avoid a scope that sounds ambitious but is weak operationally and financially.
Checklist
Whether the specific problem is clear, what outcome the first version should validate, and how you will measure that after 30-60 days.
Whether you know the first user, the single most important end-to-end flow, and why the user would come back.
Whether you can point to 3-5 critical features, an explicit out-of-scope list, and items that can stay manual at the beginning.
Whether the data sources, required integrations, roles, admin surface, edge cases, budget, and timeline constraints are already named.
Fast first step
You do not need a full specification. Describe the product, process, or integration in a few sentences. We will point out what needs clarification, what can be built first, and where the delivery risks are.
Goal, current state, constraints, and links or materials if they already exist.
A concrete next step: scope workshop, MVP Kickstart, Rescue Audit, integration sprint, or a smaller pilot.
Fewer generic calls, faster qualification, and a clearer decision before committing budget.
Send 2-3 sentences about the product, current stage, and what is blocking the decision today. We will help structure the questions and suggest a sensible next step: direct contact or an MVP Kickstart-style starting scope.
Send the brief to bok@chdr.tech