Enrollment Status

Not Enrolled

You are not enrolled in this course yet. Enroll to unlock lessons and post-test access.

COURSE OVERVIEW

FCI - Design Thinking & The Minimum Viable Product

FCI - Design Thinking & The Minimum Viable Product
CE Credit Online Video
Course Credit Type
CE Credit
Course Category
General
Course Format
Online Video
Course Credit
N/A
Course Cost / Access
$499.99
Program Summary

Design Thinking and Minimum Viable Product (MVP) Course

This course introduces Design Thinking and the Minimum Viable Product (MVP) framework, equipping participants with practical strategies to develop, test, and refine innovative solutions. Through a human-centered approach, participants will learn to identify user needs, prototype ideas, and validate concepts before full-scale development.

The course covers the five stages of Design Thinking—Empathize, Define, Ideate, Prototype, and Test—guiding learners through structured problem-solving techniques that drive creativity and market relevance. Participants will also explore MVP development, focusing on building, launching, and iterating products with minimal resources to assess market demand and optimize success.

By the end of this course, participants will be able to:

  • Apply the Design Thinking Framework – Understand and implement the five stages of Design Thinking (Empathize, Define, Ideate, Prototype, and Test) to develop user-centered solutions.
  • Develop and Validate a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) – Create an MVP with essential features, test its market viability, and iterate based on user feedback.
  • Conduct Effective User Research & Market Validation – Use empathy-driven research to identify customer needs and validate product-market fit before full-scale development.
  • Utilize Prototyping & Testing Techniques – Build low-cost prototypes and refine ideas through structured testing and real-world feedback loops.
  • Avoid Common Pitfalls in Innovation & Product Development – Recognize and navigate common challenges, such as premature scaling, inefficient prototyping, and lack of iterative testing.