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Building something for months without talking about it publicly is… weird

I’ve been lurking on Indie Hackers for a while, so I figured I should finally post something.

One thing I didn’t expect when building online:
the hardest part isn’t always the product itself.

Sometimes it’s the constant feeling that everything already exists.

You spend weeks building features, refining details, fixing tiny UX issues nobody will probably notice…
while wondering if anyone will actually care in the end.

Lately I’ve been realizing that presentation and trust matter way more than most founders think.

A lot of products are technically good.
Very few actually feel polished.

That’s honestly what I’ve been obsessed with recently:
making things feel clean, credible, simple, and human.

Still learning a lot every week.

Curious:
what’s been the most unexpectedly difficult part of building for you so far?

on May 20, 2026
  1. 1

    The tension you're describing is real, but I think it helps to separate two different questions: "Is the product good enough to ship?" and "Is the product good enough to learn from?"

    For the second question, rough is fine. You need signal, not polish. But for the first question, in 2026, you're right that the bar has moved. A product that feels unfinished doesn't just bounce users — it tells them you don't respect their time.

    The approach I've seen work: ship narrow and polished rather than broad and rough. One job, done well, looking clean. That's enough to validate without burning trust. The hardest part is convincing yourself to cut scope, not corners.

  2. 1

    The classic "ship fast, fix later" MVP advice feels increasingly outdated. Markets have matured. Customers now have extremely high expectations, endless alternatives, and very little patience. A sloppy MVP doesn't always validate your idea. It can damage your brand before you even get a second chance.

    Years ago people were more used to buggy software, limited UX, or incomplete services. A rough product was normal. Today users compare everything against polished products from Apple, Notion, or TikTok-level UX standards.

    Of course this made me take several extra months on my own product, thinking that without being polished enough, the validation wouldn't actually work as validation. This was my first startup experience, so I honestly struggled to find the right line for quick MVP validation.

    Spending too much time defeats the original purpose of preventing reckless investment. But shipping something too rough means you can't actually validate the product itself either. Finding the appropriate validation threshold in today's world doesn't seem easy.

  3. 1

    This is a strong founder observation because “polish” is usually treated like decoration, but early on it is often part of trust. A technically good product can still feel uncertain if the positioning, name, landing page, and first impression do not make it feel credible enough to try.

    The line that stands out is: “A lot of products are technically good. Very few actually feel polished.” That could be the real category angle if you are building around product presentation, trust, or credibility for early founders.

    I’d also think seriously about the naming layer early. If the product is meant to help founders make things feel clean, credible, simple, and human, the brand itself has to signal that immediately. Auryxa .com would fit that polished, premium, trust-first direction much better than a name that feels too experimental or builder-only.

  4. 1

    Welcome to Indie Hackers!

    The feeling that everything already exists is actually a good sign—it means there's a proven market for the problem. The "moat" usually isn't the feature list, it's exactly what you mentioned: polish, trust, and the human touch.

    Most founders build for a generic user. The products that feel polished are the ones that build for a specific workflow.

    If you're obsessing over making things feel clean and credible, you're already ahead of the 90% of MVPs that are just functional but look like a bootstrap template.

    What's the landing page for what you're building? I'd love to see how you're translating that obsession with polish into the UI.

    I do $1 conversion roasts for exactly this kind of stuff if you want a brutal honest second pair of eyes: https://roastmysite.io/?src=external_manual_ih_weirdpost_evaltrum_may20_usd_presell_hv

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