If the first step is to get the product to market, does that mean that actually creating the product has to wait until the second, third or fourth steps? Heck, with marketing skills like yours, why even create a product! At least now I know not to invest in any of your projects.
Easy there tiger.
The first step is indeed creating the product. This is a given (I probably worded this incorrectly).
It doesn't need to be the fully polished product (this is what I was getting at). It must work though and be ready for a customer to use on their website/forum.
This won't take long, because the OP has already shown that the product works.
The idea is already implemented. The labour intensive part is creating the different drawings and questions.
What you don't want to do is spend months/years on this idea and then after all that hard work...no one buys or uses your product, when it is released.
OR worse still, you think of the idea...you spend 2 years making it polished and perfect...in the meantime another company has released a very similar product (captcha alternative) and is basically ahead of you in market share. Effectively, you will be dead and buried before you even started.
This is why you need to create a beta version to test the waters. See if it sells or gets interest. Once you have a website, you can showcase your product and check the response.
At this stage, if the response is really bad, you can ditch your idea. You will only have wasted 2-3 months of your life. No big deal. At least you tried.
If you do as some people will have you do, ie. product the fully polished version...and then it fails, you will have wasted a lot more of your time and you will find it VERY difficult to walk away from. Many inventors have problems walking away from something that they invested much time/effort in and end up spending even more time and effort attempting to break the market with a product that simply has no chance of succeeding.
You need to test the idea out first, before scaling it up and spending serious resources (time/effort/money) on it. Virtually every company in the World started small and then grew. They didn't start out huge and polished.
Re: infurlWith regards to talking about having no product before launching it. This is actually a common strategy used in business.
I shall give you an example.
A guy (call him Paul Allen of Microsoft) promises a company (call them IBM) that he can have a piece of software (call it 86-DOS, which is later called MS DOS) up and running on their computer, which promises to do something.
At this stage, MS have not created or own anything like this software...yet.Allen and Gates then buy a clone of the software from another company (call them Seattle Computer Products) after taking an advance from IBM . They rebrand it (MSDOS) and deliver it to IBM.
Had the above deal not happened...MS would probably have shut down a long time ago.
I can give you other examples of similar practises where a company will sell (and take money for) products that they don't actually have yet, but I think you get the picture.
OP, I am not advocating that you do what Microsoft did, as it does require great business acumen, skill and luck to pull something like that off. It is also very risky and could cost you dear (ask Oracle).
The choice is yours as it is your idea. What I like about it, is the low start up costs. Providing you have the right technical skills, you can get your prototype ready for people to try out for very little.
The danger is that another company will come along and do exactly what you are doing and bring the product to market earlier and faster. Once customers start using their product, you will have to convince those customer to abandon their existing captcha supplier and use yours instead. This may not be easy. Even if you prove that your product is better, those using the rival company's captcha (which is very similar to yours) may not switch to your product. And remember this,
the best product doesnt always win.
If I were you though, I would spend at least 2 days searching the internet to see if there are any captcha alternatives which offer what you are doing and/or are very similar. Check out the competition...this is extremely important.