Greenfield MVP Launch: Zero to Production in 12 Weeks
How to ship a brand-new product from kickoff to launch in one quarter. The week-by-week plan, decisions to make early, and traps that delay greenfield projects.
Table of contents
- When does the MVP shape actually fit?
- What is the cost of treating MVP like a normal project?
- What does the 12-week MVP timeline look like?
- What does the kickoff doc look like for an MVP?
- What artifacts run during the build phase?
- How does an MVP scale (or not) to multi-team?
- What failure modes does the MVP plan introduce?
- When is MVP the wrong shape?
- Where should you go from here?
A greenfield MVP is the most fun project a team can do and the most likely to fail by overscoping. The constraint is exactly 12 weeks; the scope must be small enough to fit. This case study shows the week-by-week plan, the discipline that keeps the scope honest, and the artifacts that make MVPs ship.
When does the MVP shape actually fit?
Three signals.
You are validating a hypothesis. The MVP exists to learn whether real users want this. If the requirement is "ship a production system at scale", that's a different project shape
- not MVP.
You can defer "real" engineering. Multi-region, deep observability, comprehensive testing - these can wait until the MVP proves users care.
Sponsor is OK with a fast feedback loop. Sponsor will see working software in 12 weeks and decide whether to invest further. If they want a 6-month plan with 5 phases, MVP isn't the framing.
If you're building a critical service that must work right from day 1 (compliance, payments to scale), use the lifecycle chapters with a longer horizon, not MVP.
What is the cost of treating MVP like a normal project?
Three failure modes.
Scope creep into 6 months. "While we're at it..." adds 5 weeks each. By month 4, the MVP is a v1 release. Worst of both worlds: too much for fast learning, too little for real launch.
Over-engineered architecture. Microservices for 3 endpoints, Kafka for 100 events/day, multi-region for 50 users. Months spent on platform that the MVP doesn't need.
Decision paralysis. Treating every choice as load-bearing. The MVP's architecture is meant to be temporary; not every ADR deserves an hour.
What does the 12-week MVP timeline look like?
gantt
title 12-Week MVP Plan
dateFormat YYYY-MM-DD
section Discovery
Stakeholder interviews :a1, 2026-06-21, 5d
Kickoff doc + RACI :a2, after a1, 3d
section Build
Sprint 1: auth + skeleton :b1, 2026-07-06, 10d
Sprint 2: core feature 1 :b2, after b1, 10d
Sprint 3: core feature 2 :b3, after b2, 10d
Sprint 4: persist + integrate :b4, after b3, 10d
section Beta
Internal beta (alpha users) :c1, 2026-08-31, 7d
Friendly customer beta :c2, after c1, 7d
section Launch
Launch checklist + comms :d1, 2026-09-14, 7d
Public launch + monitor :d2, after d1, 7d
The structure is brutal: 2 weeks discovery, 8 weeks build, 2 weeks launch. Anything that does not fit gets deferred to v2.
What does the kickoff doc look like for an MVP?
# MVP Kickoff: {{ Product Name }}
## The hypothesis we're testing
{{ One sentence: users will pay/use/sign up for X because Y }}
## Success metric
{{ Specific, measurable: 100 sign-ups in 30 days post-launch }}
## In scope (Must list, all 5 items)
- M1: User can sign up with email
- M2: User can complete the core flow
- M3: We can charge them (if applicable)
- M4: We can see their behaviour (analytics)
- M5: They can contact us (support form)
## Out of scope (everything else)
- Multi-language
- Mobile app
- Advanced search
- Admin dashboard
- ...
## Architecture (intentionally simple)
- ASP.NET Core monolith
- PostgreSQL single instance
- Stripe for payments
- Mailgun for email
- Auth0 for auth
- No queues, no caches, no microservices
## Team
- TL/PM: {{ name }} (60% time)
- Engineers: 3 full-time
- Designer: half time
- Sponsor: VP Product
## Beta plan
- Week 9: 5 internal users
- Week 10: 20 friendly customers
- Week 11: 100 waitlist users (private launch)
- Week 12: public
## Date commitment
2026-09-14 public launch. If we cannot, we cut scope further -
date is fixed.
Two details. The hypothesis and success metric are explicit - this is what we're learning. The architecture section is short because choices are deliberately defaults; only deviations from the default need rationale.
What artifacts run during the build phase?
flowchart LR
Standup[Daily standup<br/>15 min] --> Sprint[Sprint planning<br/>2-week]
Sprint --> Demo[End-of-sprint demo<br/>30 min sponsor + team]
Demo --> Status[Weekly status<br/>1-page]
Status --> Retro[End-of-sprint retro<br/>60 min]
Retro --> Sprint
The MVP runs the lifecycle artifacts compressed: standup daily, 2-week sprints, demo + status + retro at end of each. Demo is the secret weapon - sponsor sees real progress every 2 weeks and trust compounds.
How does an MVP scale (or not) to multi-team?
It doesn't. MVPs are single-team by design. If the work genuinely needs multiple teams, it's not an MVP - it's a program. The right shape is then one team builds the MVP slice and other teams contribute as consulted dependencies.
If the MVP succeeds, then the program scales: more teams, Now/Next/Later roadmap, multiple status reports rolling up. But the MVP itself stays single-team.
What failure modes does the MVP plan introduce?
- Hypothesis lost. Team forgets why they're building this. Mitigation: hypothesis is the first line of every status report; review it weekly.
- Beta findings ignored. 100 beta users say feature X is confusing; team launches anyway. Mitigation: 1-week beta fix-it window between beta close and public launch.
- Date slips invisibly. Each sprint slips 2 days; by week 10, launch is delayed 3 weeks. Mitigation: ruthless scope cut at each sprint review; date is fixed, scope flexes.
- No instrumentation. MVP launches without analytics; team cannot tell if it worked. Mitigation: M4 (analytics) is in the Must list, not deferred.
When is MVP the wrong shape?
Two cases.
Already have product-market fit. If users are already using something, the next thing isn't an MVP - it's a feature addition with stakeholder expectations. Use the normal lifecycle chapters.
Compliance or safety-critical. Medical, financial, infrastructure software cannot ship an "MVP" with cut corners. Use the same kickoff/scope/launch artifacts but with a longer timeline and full quality bars.
Where should you go from here?
Next case study: legacy modernisation - the opposite shape, an old system being upgraded. After that, vendor managed project covers the case where most of the work is outside your team.