What I learned shipping tiny features that feel big
A practical note on the small product details that create momentum, trust, and the feeling of progress.
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The best projects rarely start with a dramatic launch. They start with one specific problem, one clear user, and a small improvement that makes the rest of the roadmap easier to believe in.
I like building features that are narrow enough to finish, but polished enough to teach me something about the broader product direction. That balance has changed how I think about scope, design, and what makes work feel alive.
The biggest lesson: if a change makes the user feel more confident, it is rarely too small.