Builder prompt
Create a dated execution plan for "Vertigo relief app". Keep the first milestone tied to Build a lightweight landing page plus a no-code guided-Epley walkthrough and run targeted ads to vertigo/BPPV search terms; measure email signups and the share who complete the maneuver flow. Validate B2B demand by pitching 10-15 ENT/audiology/physio clinics on recommending it for between-visit home care and counting how many agree to trial it with patients.. Use these bottlenecks: Regulatory and medical-claims risk: positioning the app as treating or curing BPPV can trigger FDA software-as-a-medical-device scrutiny and liability; marketing must stay within wellness/educational claims and carry medical disclaimers.; Clinical safety risk: the Epley maneuver is unsafe for some users (neck/back disease, vascular conditions, retinal detachment) and self-diagnosis may miss serious causes of vertigo such as stroke, so robust screening and escalation prompts are essential.; Crowded niche with several established free and low-cost competitors and inherently low willingness-to-pay for an episodic, often self-resolving condition, making retention and recurring revenue difficult.; A broad AI assistant can flatten differentiation unless the wedge is painfully specific.; The first release can become a generic dashboard if the job is not named tightly.; Needs real buyer access, not only desk research.; Needs proof of budget or repeated urgency.. Use these accelerators: Can talk to the buyer before writing much code.; Can ship a narrow first-win demo quickly.; Can use local-first research artifacts to keep validation moving without a large team.; Use specificity as the wedge: one buyer, one workflow, one measurable result.; Show proof earlier than broad competitors with before-and-after examples and small pilot data.; Keep implementation lighter than incumbent suites or generic AI assistants.; Concierge review or paid template. Link the output to the Idea Builder prompt and do not expand beyond the first validated workflow.