Product strategy, PRD, mockups, and handoff in one workflow
AI product planning for startup teams
Agimon helps founders, product managers, and small startup teams turn a rough idea into PRD-style requirements, interactive HTML mockups, go-to-market context, and developer handoff material before build work starts.
No credit card required. Free plan available.
Agimon Project
Startup product spec
PRD
Stories, criteria, scope
Mockups
HTML screens and flows
GTM
Positioning and launch notes
Dev handoff
Specs and open questions
What should product strategy look like for a startup team?
For an early team, product strategy is the shared working plan for who the product serves, what problem matters first, which scope is worth building, how the first experience should work, and what the team needs to learn before launch. Agimon gives that plan a place to live: discovery notes, requirements, mockups, GTM assumptions, and handoff context stay connected in one project.
- Start with the customer problem and Lean Canvas assumptions.
- Turn the idea into requirements, user stories, acceptance criteria, and scope notes.
- Create mockups and user-flow links that make the spec easier to discuss.
- Carry positioning, pricing assumptions, launch notes, and handoff details into review.
The problem is rarely a missing doc
Startup planning breaks when every function keeps a different version of the product in their head. The founder has the customer story. Product has the scope. Design has a flow sketch. Marketing has positioning notes. Engineering has questions that arrive too late. By the time the team asks for an estimate, the important assumptions are spread everywhere.
Scope drifts before the first sprint
Ideas move faster than the shared spec, so the team debates details that should have been settled earlier.
Mockups lose the product context
Screens are easier to review when they are tied to user stories, requirements, and launch assumptions.
Handoff happens too late
Engineering should see goals, constraints, acceptance criteria, and open questions before implementation pressure starts.
Plan the product through five startup-ready phases
Agimon organizes product projects through Discovery, Definition, Design, Developer Handoff, and Submission. Use the phases as a checklist for the decisions your team needs before build.
1
Discovery
Capture the problem, customer segment, Lean Canvas assumptions, timeline, budget constraints, and early product ideas.
2
Definition
Shape requirements, user stories, acceptance criteria, technical notes, and business model or GTM strategy.
3
Design
Create brand context and interactive HTML mockups so the team can review the experience, not just read the spec.
4
Developer Handoff
Package the requirements, flow context, component notes, API suggestions, and implementation questions for estimation and planning.
5
Submission
Submit a completed project for review and track whether it is pending, reviewed, or approved.
What each person gets before build starts
One shared planning workflow reduces handoff gaps without saying every role needs every artifact.
Founders
A clearer way to turn customer insight, positioning, budget, and launch assumptions into a reviewable plan.
Product leads
A structured path from idea to requirements, mockups, and handoff without rebuilding the same planning stack every time.
Designers
Screen ideas and flow links that carry the product intent, not isolated mockups with missing context.
Engineers
Requirements, acceptance criteria, technical notes, and open questions they can use for estimation and implementation planning.
Marketers
GTM context, positioning, pricing assumptions, launch timeline, and channel notes tied back to the product being built.
Startup planning deliverables Agimon can help produce
Use Agimon when the next step is not another brainstorm. Use it when the team needs artifacts that make a product decision easier to review.
PRD-style requirements
Problem, users, features, user stories, acceptance criteria, technical requirements, scope notes, and open questions.
Explore PRD generationInteractive HTML mockups
Generated mockups for key screens, plus links that show how screens connect in the user flow.
See how mockups workGo-to-market context
Positioning, pricing assumptions, competitive notes, launch timeline, marketing-channel recommendations, and validation questions.
Plan GTM strategyDeveloper handoff package
Structured specs, component notes, API suggestions, technical requirements, and exportable material for review.
Prepare developer handoffLean Canvas and strategy context
A connected view of problem, solution, customer segments, channels, cost structure, revenue streams, and business model thinking.
Connect canvas and user flowsUse Agimon before you ask engineering to estimate
The best time to use Agimon is before implementation pressure turns unclear assumptions into tickets. Start from the idea, make risks visible, review the first experience, prepare the handoff, then submit the project when the team is ready for review.
Start free01
Start from the rough idea
Create a project and capture the product name, description, audience, and first set of assumptions.
02
Make the risky assumptions visible
Fill the Lean Canvas, strategy, requirements, and GTM notes so the team can challenge the plan early.
03
Review the first experience
Generate mockups, link the main screens, and discuss what the user should understand or do next.
04
Prepare the handoff
Bring requirements, mockups, technical notes, and open decisions together before development planning.
05
Submit for review
When the project is ready, submit it and track the review state.
AI can draft the plan. Your team still validates the market.
Agimon can help structure product strategy, requirements, mockups, GTM context, and handoff material. It does not prove customer demand, guarantee pricing, replace user interviews, decide engineering feasibility, or promise launch results. Treat the output as a sharper first draft that your startup team reviews with real customer, product, design, and engineering judgment.
Start with a free product planning project
Agimon has a Free plan with no credit card required. Current public pricing also lists Starter at $19 per month and Pro at $29 per month, with annual options available from the pricing section.
No credit card required to start.
Startup product planning FAQs
What should a startup product strategy include?
It should cover the customer problem, target segment, product scope, requirements, first user experience, business model or GTM assumptions, success metrics, risks, and open questions. In Agimon, those pieces can live together with PRD-style requirements, Lean Canvas context, mockups, and handoff material.
Can Agimon help a startup create a PRD?
Yes. Agimon can help structure PRD-style requirements, including user stories, acceptance criteria, technical requirements, scope notes, and related product context. The team should still review the PRD against customer evidence and engineering constraints.
Can Agimon generate startup product mockups?
Yes. Agimon can generate interactive HTML mockups for key screens and link those mockups into user flows. Use them for product review and handoff discussions, then have design and engineering review the final implementation direction.
Does Agimon create a go-to-market plan?
Agimon can help draft GTM strategy artifacts such as positioning, pricing assumptions, competitive notes, launch timeline, marketing-channel recommendations, and related launch context. It does not validate demand or guarantee that a channel or price will work.
How is this different from a PRD template?
A PRD template gives you a document structure. Agimon connects the product spec to the surrounding startup planning work: Lean Canvas assumptions, strategy, mockups, GTM context, user-flow links, and developer handoff material.
When should a startup use Agimon?
Use it when a product idea is important enough to review seriously but not yet ready for engineering tickets. That is usually before sprint planning, before an investor or stakeholder review, or before a founder hands work to a designer or developer.
Does Agimon replace customer discovery?
No. Agimon can organize and draft the planning artifacts, but your team still needs customer interviews, market evidence, pricing research, design review, and engineering judgment.
Is there a free plan?
Yes. Agimon has a Free plan with no credit card required to start. Current public pricing also lists Starter and Pro plans in the homepage pricing section.