Keep It Right-But-Light

A clearer standard for building well

Most builders have inherited a bad vocabulary for early product work.

We tell people to build an MVP, but the phrase has become so overused that it often clarifies less than it confuses. Some people hear “minimum” and interpret it as permission to ship something brittle, awkward, or barely usable. Others hear “viable” and inflate the work into a miniature production system, complete with abstractions, infrastructure, tests, edge-case handling, and design polish that may never matter.

To balance that out we encourage people to “just hack it together,” which pushes the pendulum into a different problem. Hacky can be useful when it means fast, practical, and unconcerned with unnecessary ceremony. But hacky too often becomes an excuse for bad work. It works in the narrowest technical sense, but some see it as license to create terrible unpleasant use, error laden, difficult to understand, and fragile the moment reality touches it.

This is the gap “right-but-light” is meant to name.

Right-but-light means building something correctly enough that it earns trust, while keeping it light enough that it remains easy to change. It is not about doing less work. It is about refusing to carry more weight than the moment requires. It isn’t minimal or maximal. It is that harmonious balance so many folks have trouble finding. We don’t hack down the scope to get away with a bad implementation, we do it so the one thing we choose to do is done well – while still not evergreen or perfect.

The “right” part matters because users do not experience your product through your intentions. They experience it through the surface area you give them. A button that is twice as large as it should be may not break the system, but it may still signal that your offering is dangerously unkempt. A workflow that technically completes the task but makes the user think too hard won’t get used – at all. A prototype that loses data, hides errors, or makes the user feel unsure doesn’t give you the real signals you are looking for. These things may be excusable in a throwaway 24-hour hack-a-thon demo, but they are not balanced for an initial product seedling. They train the builder, the user, and the team to tolerate roughness where clarity was needed.

The “light” part matters because early certainty is usually fake. At the beginning of a product, most of the important learning still has to happen. The shape of the problem will change. The user may care about a different part of the workflow than expected. The thing you thought was a feature may turn out to be a demo path. The thing you thought was temporary may become the center of the product. In that environment, heavy architecture is often a liability disguised as discipline and thoughfulness.

A right-but-light implementation avoids both forms of waste. It does not ignore usability in the name of speed, and it does not overbuild permanence into something that has not yet earned permanence.

This distinction has become more important with agents. Human teams already struggled with the nuance between fast and sloppy, or thoughtful and overbuilt. Agents amplify that ambiguity. Ask an agent to “build an MVP” and it may produce a sprawling approximation of a real application. Ask it to “make it hacky” and it may skip the very details that make the product usable. The instruction was vague, so the output becomes a coin flip between underbuilt and overbuilt.

“Keep it right-but-light” is a better constraint because it tells both the human and the agent what kind of tradeoff is being made. The work should be correct in the parts that matter. The interface should be understandable. The happy path should feel intentional. The data should not vanish. The user should not have to forgive the product in order to use it.

But the implementation should remain light. Maybe the data lives in a JSON file before it earns a database. Maybe the workflow is hardcoded before it earns configurability. Maybe the UI uses an existing design pattern rather than inventing a new system. Maybe the feature does not need role-based permissions, event streams, audit trails, background jobs, and a full settings page on day one. Maybe the right version is simply the smallest version that behaves with taste.

Right-but-light also gives teams a cleaner stopping rule. The question is not “is this complete?” because early products are almost never complete. The better question is: “Is this right enough to learn from, and light enough to change after we learn?”

That question changes the conversation. It moves the team away from false binaries. You are no longer choosing between a disposable hack and a production-grade system. You are choosing the minimum level of correctness required for meaningful use, and the minimum level of structure required for responsible iteration. Yes, that is what MVP and lean startup. It is just that I have tried for YEARS to explain that to people and it either doesn’t land or get me in to trouble with “you said to do the minimum!”

For example, a right-but-light onboarding flow may not need analytics dashboards, branching personalization, enterprise configuration, and a polished admin panel. But it probably does need clear copy, coherent visual hierarchy, a reset path for testing, and enough state handling that the user does not get trapped. A right-but-light internal tool may not need a formal database schema or complex permissions. But it probably does need predictable inputs, readable outputs, and error states that do not require the builder to stand nearby and explain what went wrong.

There are many great product folks out there building things you love, and I am sure you have used a product you loved and realized there was no delete button and wonders “WTF? Why can’t I delete?!”. If you get a req for your unaware peers in different departments they would have died on the sword to put the obviousl “delete” in on v1, but no feature is truly “simple” and without a time cost. So, that product manager says “they need to love what they create before they need to delete.” One less unit of time for one side of the product, one extra unit of time for another. No one has infinite time or infinite money. No one. 

So how do you chose? The point is not to lower standards. It is to place the standard in the right part of the work and be okay with walking away from the other.

Long-lasting applications deserve robustness, scalability, observability, automated tests, security reviews, edge-case handling, and design precision. But not every early feature has earned that full burden yet.

Premature permanence slows learning. It turns every change into a negotiation with yesterday’s assumptions.

Speed without standards is not iteration. It is motion. Wheels spinning fast in the mud.

It asks for seriousness without heaviness. It asks for speed without sloppiness. It asks for taste without vanity. It asks the builder to cut everything that is not required, while doing the remaining things with care.

That is the deeper meaning of the phrase.

Right-but-light is not another way to say MVP. It is a correction to what MVP has become. It restores the part people forgot when “agile” and “MVP” became a household term.

Can You, Did You, and Taste

Three stages separate ideas from products, and products from things people love.

The first stage is capability.

Can it be done? Can the software be written? Can the company be started? Can the product be built? Can the problem be solved?

These questions matter because capability is the foundation upon which everything else rests. Nothing can be executed, adopted, or admired until it is first plausible.

This is where most people rest comfortably.

The surprising thing about capability is that proving something can be done often provides many of the same emotional rewards as actually doing it. Once someone becomes convinced they could build the company, write the book, get in shape, learn the skill, or launch the product, the pressure largely disappears. Potential becomes a source of comfort.

The entrepreneur enjoys imagining the startup. The author enjoys discussing the book. The engineer enjoys architecting the system. The athlete enjoys knowing they could get serious whenever they decide the time is right. People tend to love their own brains and marvel at what it can achieve. Potential is attractive because it is free from accountability. It cannot fail because it does not yet exist.

Did you actually do it?

The second stage is execution. It only lives in the past tense. This is where the conversation changes. Ideas become products. Plans become companies. Discussions become outcomes. Concepts become features available for use and critique to the public domain. The world stops evaluating intentions and starts evaluating evidence.

A customer cannot buy potential. A user cannot interact with ambition. An investor cannot generate returns from possibility alone (though they push this rule as much as possible). The market, unlike our friends and colleagues, is remarkably indifferent to what could have happened. It only responds to what did happen.

People who reach this stage deserve significant credit. The distance between an idea and reality is far larger than most people appreciate. Building something that survives contact with the real world is difficult. Something complete, end-to-end. It accomplishes its intend (big or small) and no hand holding or excuses are needed for it to be used properly. Launching is difficult. Selling is difficult. Maintaining momentum is difficult.

Most people never get there. And I am being generous with “most”.

Yet many who do arrive at execution mistakenly believe they have reached the finish line. They assume that because something works, people will care. They assume that because a solution is objectively better, adoption will naturally follow. They assume that utility alone is enough. They believe a logical use case exists and therefore usage will follow. A good plan and execution is all that is needed.

History suggests otherwise.

The graveyard of technology is filled with products that worked. Many were faster than their competitors. Many were technically superior. Some were years ahead of their time. Their failure was not one of engineering. Their failure was assuming that human beings make decisions primarily through logic.

Taste.

Taste is one of the most misunderstood concepts in business because it is often reduced to aesthetics. People hear the word and think about typography, color palettes, industrial design, architecture, or fashion. Those things matter, but they are only symptoms of something deeper.

Taste is the ability to understand how another human being will experience what you have created.

It is the recognition that people do not merely consume functionality. They consume stories, emotions, identity, aspiration, status, trust, culture, and delight. A chair is not simply somewhere to sit. A restaurant is not merely a place to eat. A home is not simply shelter. A product is not just a collection of features. Even a purposefully poort taste for those that are tasteless is, in fact, a taste. The trickle down story line of decisions and focused intent lead to those that have the same test to become interested. Taste is not being fashionable, it is knowing people need clothes and certain groups of people like cheap clothes, some like expensive clothes, and some like expensive clothes that are on sale – but they know which group of tasters they want to have.

Every meaningful creation eventually becomes an experience.

This is why two products with nearly identical functionality can produce radically different outcomes. One becomes beloved while the other is forgotten. One creates a movement while the other creates a user base. One becomes part of a person’s identity while the other remains a tool.

The difference is often explained by taste.

The creators who understand taste recognize that presentation is part of the product. Storytelling is part of the product. Culture is part of the product. The emotional experience surrounding something is not separate from what is being built. It is one of the things being built.

Most people spend their lives asking whether something can be done. A much smaller group proves that it can. The rarest creators understand that neither capability nor execution guarantees significance.

The first stage asks whether something is possible.

The second proves that it is.

The third determines whether anyone cares.