“We’ll launch once we get a few more data points.”
“Let’s just run one more customer interview.”
“This needs more validation.”
If I had a dollar for every time I heard that at the start of a project... well, let’s just say I’d have enough to fund a dozen MVPs.
Welcome to Validation Limbo—a comfortable, well-lit purgatory where good ideas go to die slowly and expensively. And while it feels responsible, safe, and rigorous, it’s actually one of the most costly places a product organization can live.
Let’s talk about the true price of moving too slow.
🧯 The Hidden Burn Rate of "Just One More Test"
Every month your team spends stuck in research-mode is a month your competitors are iterating, launching, and learning in-market.
If your product org costs $2M a year to run (pretty typical for mid-market teams), every 90-day delay is a $500,000 burn with no customer-facing outcome.
But it’s not just the budget you’re torching. The opportunity cost—what could’ve been earned, learned, or saved—is even more painful:
- Missed first-mover advantage
- Lost market share to faster players
- Burned team morale from endlessly moving goalposts
- Eroded exec trust (“How is this still not validated?”)
😬 Real Talk: “Perfect” Isn’t the Goal—Proof Is
In product leadership, the most expensive thing you can build…
is the wrong thing.
When we work with teams through the Breakthrough Lab Method™, the magic isn’t just in speed. It’s in getting customer validation before you commit serious resources to code, supply chains, or roadmaps.
Here’s what we often see:
- Scenario A (Traditional Path):
12 months in → $1.2M spent → Still no real customer usage.
- Scenario B (Validated Path):
5 days → Lo-fi prototype → 8 real users tested → Pivot before build.
Which one sounds riskier?
🚀 The Irony of “Caution”
Leaders often slow things down in the name of risk reduction.
But the real risk?
Building a product no one wants.
Burning team belief while waiting.
Losing momentum your org might not get back.
As Simon Sinek says, accountability is what makes people take things seriously. And when product leaders don’t assign real timelines and ownership to the innovation process, they inadvertently foster drift. Not diligence—drift.
Worse still, as Brené Brown reminds us: “Unclear is unkind.” And sitting in a fuzzy backlog of “We’re still testing” isn’t kind to your team, your customers, or your company’s strategic bets.
💡 What to Do Instead
If your team is stuck in Validation Limbo, here’s your exit strategy:
- Set a deadline for validation.
2 weeks. Not 2 months. Clarity breeds action.
- Build to learn, not to launch.
Create testable prototypes fast. Customers will teach you more than post-it notes ever will.
- Use a contained sprint structure.
We help teams compress 12 months of innovation into 90 days using our Design Sprint framework. You don’t need to boil the ocean—just run the right experiments.
- Make someone accountable for momentum.
Not the “innovation lead” who reports to no one. A real owner with cross-functional authority.
Final Thought: Speed is a Strategy
You can’t wait your way into product-market fit.
At Centered, we help mid-market product leaders move fast without guessing. Our clients don’t just build products—they build confidence. Confidence that they’re solving the right problem, for the right customer, at the right time.
Because slow innovation isn’t safe.
It’s just expensive.
🔄 Ready to escape validation limbo and bring your bold idea to life?
Start here: https://centered.work | https://centered.work/breakthrough-lab
💬 What’s your team’s biggest innovation bottleneck right now? Drop it in the comments—we’re listening.