You have the workbook and you have decided to build. This is the push that gets it done. Five milestones take you from a blank idea to a real product with a live link.
Your goal is an MVP, a minimum viable product. The smallest finished version that actually gets someone a result. Not a masterpiece, not a full offer stack. A small PDF product that is done and listed will always beat a big one that never leaves your laptop.
You outline everything you would love it to be, then pick what goes into version one and park the rest as your roadmap. You build on it later if the demand is there, when your customers lead you to it.
Your product starts with something you can already help someone with. You are not chasing the perfect idea, just one small, practical one with real signs that people want it.
Your idea is locked. On to planning your MVP.
Outline the whole thing first, everything you would love it to be. Then pick what goes into version one. What you leave out is not binned, it becomes your roadmap for later, built on if your customers lead you there. An MVP here is a finished, listed, small product that gets a result. Not a masterpiece, not a full offer stack.
Blueprint locked. Time to write it.
This is where you get it written. Speed over polish. A complete rough draft is worth far more than a perfect half. Write it straight into the interactive workbook.
The hard part is behind you. Now make it look the part.
Keep the design simple. A clean, readable PDF beats a fancy one you never finish.
You have a finished product. One milestone left. List it.
You can list anywhere. Skool is a strong pick because it gives you a community and a place to keep building your product over time. The walkthrough covers setting it up there.
Your product is live.
Everyone has the idea. You are the one who executed it. You have a real product and a live link where someone can buy it. That is the whole difference, and you just proved which side of it you are on.
Version one is out in the world. Keep the parked ideas from your blueprint, that list is your roadmap. Build on it when your customers show you what they want more of. For now, go and get your first sale.