Its good to make a practice project, like @nocnica mentioned.
However, you can do a sort of wireframe/mock up on paper of the features of your product or use something like Figma to write out userflows, features, design, and prototyping, among other things.
Figma.com is free for personal use, up to three projects and they have tiered pricing if you need more than that.
Trello.com is another great tool to track your progress or manage with a team and uses a sort of KanBan type format to manage your project.
Notion.so is another great tool to write out all your ideas and feature details. You can write out a list of your ideas and the details and then decide which ones you will need and what they will do for your users.
Producthunt.com and indiehackers.com are some social platforms where you can get insight/advice/ideas to grow out your product, too.
These all have free to start with generous features to get you started.
I hope that these resources help. Best of luck to you.
if you want to learn more about Figma.com @andreineagoie
has a great course on Udemy that covers pretty much all you'll need to make it useful for you.
Its good to make a practice project, like
@nocnica mentioned.
However, you can do a sort of wireframe/mock up on paper of the features of your product or use something like Figma to write out userflows, features, design, and prototyping, among other things.
Figma.com is free for personal use, up to three projects and they have tiered pricing if you need more than that.
Trello.com is another great tool to track your progress or manage with a team and uses a sort of KanBan type format to manage your project.
Notion.so is another great tool to write out all your ideas and feature details. You can write out a list of your ideas and the details and then decide which ones you will need and what they will do for your users.
Producthunt.com and indiehackers.com are some social platforms where you can get insight/advice/ideas to grow out your product, too.
These all have free to start with generous features to get you started.
I hope that these resources help. Best of luck to you.
Also,
if you want to learn more about Figma.com @andreineagoie has a great course on Udemy that covers pretty much all you'll need to make it useful for you.
udemy.com/share/103F1hAkAcc1lVQ3g=/
Udemy usually has a sale every few weeks or so and the price for this course will be between $10-$12 USD.
Thanks for your views on itπ
Thanks a lot