You don't have to be completely right about every aspect of your product the first time around. Your chances of being wrong are in direct proportion to the novelty of the product you're building. An obsession with always being right usually leads to inaction. Especially for web products, the gains from always being right are almost always eclipsed by the losses resulting from your sluggishness. You can be wrong sometimes and still build consistently successful products (and companies) - as long as you improvise and shed the "ship and forget" attitude. If, however, you have a knack for being wrong most of the times, you are probably lacking a quality called good Product Sense.
Product Sense is not always an "either you have it or you don't" thing. You may demonstrate great Product Sense on consumer web products and completely suck at building ergonomic chairs. Its a function of your experience, proclivities, and intelligence. I believe that the first two of these factors are contextual, so if your current context doesn't allow you to demonstrate the full potential of your Product Sense, I would suggest changing your context so that its better aligned with these factors. Once you have found a job that better matches your experience and proclivities, do the following:
- Strive to understand your field better than anyone else
- Strive to understand your competition better than anyone else
- Be completely honest to yourself
- Be empathetic of the entire cross-section of your users or customers
- Be obsessive about product metrics
- Avoid the temptation of drawing the conclusions that support your feelings and views. Be objective
- Be curious
- This one is worth repeating - Be curious
- Learn, really learn, from your product experiences
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