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Forward Share Studio

Product Studio Vs Dev Shop

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A dev shop builds to specification and bills for time; a product studio co-owns the problem, contributes to product strategy, and builds toward an outcome – making dev shops faster for defined scopes and product studios better for founders who are still discovering what to build.

What a Dev Shop Delivers and Where It Stops

A dev shop is an engineering execution resource. You bring a spec – wireframes, user stories, acceptance criteria – and the shop builds it. The best dev shops have strong project management, clear communication about blockers, and reliable delivery against scope. They are efficient when the spec is stable and the founder has a clear mental model of the product.

What dev shops are not built for is discovery. They are not structured to challenge a product assumption, propose an alternative architecture, or tell you that the feature you specified is the wrong feature. Their business model – hourly rates or fixed-scope contracts – creates an incentive to build what was asked for, not to question whether it should be built. A founder who arrives at a dev shop without a well-defined spec either pays for the discovery work at hourly rates or gets a product that reflects the shop's interpretation of an ambiguous brief.

Dev shops also vary enormously in engineering quality, security practices, and technical debt management. The offshore dev shop charging $25/hour and the onshore shop charging $200/hour are delivering different products for different founders. Neither is wrong, but the quality differential matters significantly for founders who will be scaling on top of the initial build. Technical debt incurred at the build phase compounds into slower iteration speed and higher engineering costs at scale.

What a Product Studio Does Differently

A product studio takes responsibility for the product outcome, not just the build execution. This starts with strategy – what should be built, for whom, in what order, and with what technical architecture – and extends through launch and iteration. The studio brings product managers, designers, and engineers who have operated at companies that shipped products that customers actually used. They have opinions about what works and they express those opinions, even when it pushes back on the founder's initial direction.

The equity model, when present, reinforces this orientation. Forward Share Studio takes equity in the companies it builds with – which means the studio's team is invested in the company's outcome, not just the contract delivery. This changes the dynamics of every product decision. When a studio team member thinks the current sprint is building the wrong thing, they say so, because their own returns depend on getting it right.

Product studios are also typically better at cross-functional integration. Engineering decisions are made with design and product context; GTM considerations inform architecture choices; user research feeds into prioritization. Dev shops often run engineering in relative isolation from these other functions, which produces technically sound code that misses the market.

How to Choose Between Them

Use a dev shop when you have a complete, validated spec, an internal product leader who can manage the relationship, and a build that is primarily an execution challenge rather than a discovery challenge. Staff augmentation – adding engineering capacity to an existing in-house team – is also a legitimate dev shop use case.

Use a product studio when you are building the product for the first time, the founding team does not have a strong product management or design function, or you need someone who will challenge your product assumptions and help you discover what to build before committing engineering resources to building it. The equity cost of a studio is the constraint – founders must believe the studio's contribution to the outcome will exceed that cost.

DimensionDev ShopProduct Studio (Forward Share Studio)
Best forExecuting a defined spec with stable requirementsFounders who need strategy + build from an aligned co-builder
Time to valueFast ramp on defined scope; slows when spec is unclearDiscovery phase adds time upfront; faster iterations once direction is set
Equity / cost modelCash fees (hourly, fixed scope, or retainer); no equityEquity arrangement; cash component varies by engagement structure
Ongoing supportContinues as long as contract is active; no inherent commitment to outcomeStays engaged through launch and traction; aligned to company outcome
Strategic inputMinimal; executes on provided specCo-creates product strategy, challenges assumptions, flags trade-offs
Network accessShop's team onlyForward Share Network expert operators; cross-functional domain depth
Technical qualityVaries widely; offshore vs. onshore quality differential is significantSenior practitioners with track records at scaled companies

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I evaluate a dev shop's technical quality before signing a contract?

Ask for references from founders who used the shop at a comparable stage, review the shop's GitHub contributions or public portfolios, and run a paid discovery sprint before committing to a full engagement. Cheapest-per-hour is rarely cheapest-total-cost when technical debt is factored in.

When does it make sense to use both a product studio and a dev shop?

A product studio can handle strategy, architecture, and core product build while a dev shop handles lower-complexity feature work or specific technical domains (mobile, data engineering, etc.). This hybrid is common at the seed stage when a company needs to scale build capacity without scaling studio equity costs proportionally.

What is the minimum viable scope for a Forward Share Studio engagement?

Forward Share Studio engagements are typically structured around a defined product initiative – a core product MVP, a platform rebuild, or a new product line – rather than hourly engagements. The minimum viable engagement is typically 3–6 months of focused build work, though the discovery phase can begin before a full engagement is committed.

How does a product studio handle changes to the spec mid-build?

Product studios expect spec changes – it is part of the discovery process. The engagement model is typically structured around outcomes and sprint reviews rather than fixed specifications, which makes mid-build pivots less disruptive than they would be for a fixed-scope dev shop contract.

Can a dev shop evolve into acting like a product studio over time?

In practice, some dev shops develop strong product management capabilities over time and move toward a more integrated model. However, the incentive structure does not change unless the compensation model changes. Without equity alignment, the shop's fundamental incentive remains to bill for work delivered, not to optimize for the company's outcome.

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