Weâre living in a product gold rush.
Every week, thereâs a new AI wrapper, a new market map, a new âunbundling of X.â
VCs want vision. Customers want features. Advisors want pivots.
Itâs tempting to listen to all of it.
Itâs also a great way to build nothing useful.
At Greyborne, we build across real estate, compliance, health, and digital infrastructure. The noise is everywhere. But our process for deciding what to build is surprisingly simpleâand surprisingly repeatable.
Hereâs how we filter for signal when the world wonât shut up.
Step 1: Write down everythingâbut donât react to anything
We start by creating what we call the Noise Inbox.
Every customer idea, investor comment, Twitter insight, or new market trend goes here. No judgment. No editing. Just collection.
We review it weeklyânot in real timeâbecause real-time reaction is how good products die.
The Noise Inbox lets us acknowledge inputs without becoming reactive to them.
Step 2: Score each idea across 3 dimensions
When we sit down as a team, we run ideas through this quick scoring lens:
- Repetition: Have we heard this from more than one paying customer?
- Urgency: Is the user currently cobbling together hacks to solve this themselves?
- Strategic Weight: Will this deepen our wedge, not dilute it?
We assign a 1â5 score for each, but more importantlyâwe debate.
If something is urgent, repeated, and strategically aligned, it gets bumped to the Build Radar.
Step 3: Test the idea without building it
Before we write a single line of code, we test interest through one of three methods:
- Manual Workflow Simulation â Do it manually for a customer and see if it sticks.
- Click-Through Prototype â Mock it up and test it in Figma or Webflow.
- âWould You Pay For Thisâ Calls â Not just âWould you use this?â We ask, âWould you pay $X for this today?â
If it fails those tests, we drop it. No matter how trendy or loud it is.
Step 4: Align with our internal timing system
Even good ideas are bad timing if they distract from the current milestone.
We use a simple rule:
“If we canât ship it in <3 weeks without stalling current momentum, it goes into cold storage.”
Thatâs not a noâitâs a not now.
We revisit cold storage every month. Often, the urgency dies off and it was never real to begin with.
Step 5: Ask: Will this make us 10x better at what we already do?
Our final filter is simple:
Does this feature, product, or strategy make our wedge dramatically more valuable?
Weâre not interested in 1.1x improvements.
Weâre looking for 10x force multipliers inside a focused zone.
For example:
- Kubo didnât expand into generic legal tooling. It doubled down on eviction workflows with state-specific rulesets.
- Kyra ignored ops dashboards and focused on mobile video verification tools for maintenance work.
- Korra dropped portfolio-level analytics and focused on fast underwriting for turnaround properties under $3M.
- Pixl didnât chase web3 collectibles. It built cards for real high school athletes with real emotional value.
This discipline keeps us sharp. And scrappy.
Final Thought: Simplicity scales. Reactivity kills.
Startups die when they confuse noise for signal.
They chase edge cases. They react to smart people. They follow trends without traction.
But the best builders are more like archeologists than inventors.
They dig deeper into what already existsâuntil something unmistakably true reveals itself.
Thatâs what weâre doing at Greyborne.
One wedge at a time.
One customer at a time.
One focused release at a time.
đ Related Posts
- âEyes on the Silicon: The Power of Obsessive Focusâ
- âHow We Picked the First Feature for Kuboâ
- âWhy Great Startups Look Boring at Firstâ



