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{ "item_title" : "The Problem-First Method", "item_author" : [" Kevin Scott Dias "], "item_description" : "Late 2023. I'm on a video call with a practice owner who's about to walk. She leans forward: Do you have Autopay? I freeze. Our competitor just launched it. Every lost deal mentions it. So I say what any founder under pressure says: We can build that. Three months later, we ship. Nobody cares. We'd solved the wrong problem. Solo practitioners needed Autopay (set it, forget it, charge cards automatically). Our customers, multi-provider practices juggling insurance, exceptions, and staff who needed control, needed something completely different. That mistake cost us three months. But it taught me something worth far more: the most expensive thing you can build is the right solution to the wrong problem. This book is about the discipline of resisting that mistake, even when the pressure is on, the competitor is shipping, and everyone's waiting for you to make a call. I'm not a founder with billion-dollar exits to my name. Ambiki is a niche vertical SaaS serving pediatric therapy practices, not exactly TechCrunch headline material. But I've spent a decade making mistakes, recognizing patterns, and learning to tell the difference between real problems and imaginary ones. Inside, you'll find: The traps smart teams fall into (Autopay, Safe Oasis, the API mirage) and why competitor has it is never a good enough reason.Real frameworks that make problem-first thinking repeatable: the Feature Alignment Document, the 10-Question Validation Checklist, the Problem Atlas that replaces traditional roadmaps.How we built our teletherapy platform three weeks before COVID hit the US, and what that taught us about sitting with a problem long enough for the right solution to emerge.And the hardest lesson: how to maintain discipline when customers hand you solutions, sales wants features by Friday, and your ego whispers that of course you can build that. Every page comes from practice. The messy, uncomfortable work of sitting with problems longer than feels natural, especially when momentum makes it feel like you're still on track. If you've ever shipped something clever and polished that nobody used, this book is for you. And if you've wondered why problem-first thinking is so hard when everyone already knows they should do it, you're not alone. Knowing the trap and avoiding it are two different skills. Let's build the second one.", "item_img_path" : "https://covers1.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/9/79/825/516/9798255168392_b.jpg", "price_data" : { "retail_price" : "18.00", "online_price" : "18.00", "our_price" : "18.00", "club_price" : "18.00", "savings_pct" : "0", "savings_amt" : "0.00", "club_savings_pct" : "0", "club_savings_amt" : "0.00", "discount_pct" : "10", "store_price" : "" } }
The Problem-First Method|Kevin Scott Dias

The Problem-First Method : A Framework for Innovative Product Builders

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Overview

Late 2023. I'm on a video call with a practice owner who's about to walk. She leans forward: "Do you have Autopay?"

I freeze. Our competitor just launched it. Every lost deal mentions it. So I say what any founder under pressure says: "We can build that."

Three months later, we ship. Nobody cares.

We'd solved the wrong problem. Solo practitioners needed Autopay (set it, forget it, charge cards automatically). Our customers, multi-provider practices juggling insurance, exceptions, and staff who needed control, needed something completely different.

That mistake cost us three months. But it taught me something worth far more: the most expensive thing you can build is the right solution to the wrong problem.

This book is about the discipline of resisting that mistake, even when the pressure is on, the competitor is shipping, and everyone's waiting for you to make a call.

I'm not a founder with billion-dollar exits to my name. Ambiki is a niche vertical SaaS serving pediatric therapy practices, not exactly TechCrunch headline material. But I've spent a decade making mistakes, recognizing patterns, and learning to tell the difference between real problems and imaginary ones.

Inside, you'll find:

  • The traps smart teams fall into (Autopay, Safe Oasis, the API mirage) and why "competitor has it" is never a good enough reason.
  • Real frameworks that make problem-first thinking repeatable: the Feature Alignment Document, the 10-Question Validation Checklist, the Problem Atlas that replaces traditional roadmaps.
  • How we built our teletherapy platform three weeks before COVID hit the US, and what that taught us about sitting with a problem long enough for the right solution to emerge.

And the hardest lesson: how to maintain discipline when customers hand you solutions, sales wants features by Friday, and your ego whispers that of course you can build that.

Every page comes from practice. The messy, uncomfortable work of sitting with problems longer than feels natural, especially when momentum makes it feel like you're still on track.

If you've ever shipped something clever and polished that nobody used, this book is for you. And if you've wondered why problem-first thinking is so hard when everyone already knows they should do it, you're not alone.

Knowing the trap and avoiding it are two different skills. Let's build the second one.

This item is Non-Returnable

Details

  • ISBN-13: 9798255168392
  • ISBN-10: 9798255168392
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publish Date: April 2026
  • Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.53 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.75 pounds
  • Page Count: 250

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