For early-stage startups, time and resources are precious. You don’t have the luxury of endless pivots or bloated feature sets. So, how do you make sure you’re building the right things—the things that actually move the needle for your users and your business?
That’s where scope discovery comes in. At Roaring Infotech, we treat scope discovery as the north star in our product development process. It helps us prioritize features that matter, avoid wasted effort, and ensure alignment between our product strategy and what users actually need.
In this guide, we’re sharing a practical framework for scope discovery that will help you define, validate, and confidently move forward with features that deliver value.
Scope discovery is the process of identifying which features to build—and why. It’s about exploring potential solutions to user problems, evaluating their impact, and defining what fits within your product’s scope. For us, it’s a critical activity in the discovery track of our dual-track agile process.
Done right, it answers questions like:
We break scope discovery into three structured steps:
Not every idea deserves a place in your roadmap. That’s why the first step is a reality check.
Done right, it answers questions like:
We then score each idea using a User Impact Score—a quick way to gauge importance and relevance. If the score is high, we move forward. If it’s mid-to-low, we either put it on ice or dig for more insights.
Once a potential feature clears the first filter, we dig into the why, what, and how:
To make prioritization more objective, we score ideas using four key drivers:
Each is rated on a scale of 1–5, and a weighted formula calculates a final priority score.
If an idea scores well, it moves to the roadmap and backlog. If not, it’s shelved or parked for future review.
By this point, the feature has:
That means it's ready to be refined, estimated, and executed during sprint planning.
From working with dozens of early-stage startups, here are a few lessons we swear by:
Scope discovery is not just a phase—it’s a mindset. If your product team gets great at identifying high-impact opportunities and cutting distractions, you’ll build faster, with more focus, and a higher chance of success.
At Roaring Infotech, this framework keeps us laser-focused on delivering features that matter. And if you implement these steps in your own team, you’ll be well on your way to building products that users actually love.