Discovery Debt
Fast delivery is only valuable if you know where you're going

Delivery got fast. Teams are shipping in days what used to take quarters. Prototypes from a prompt, features from a description. That acceleration is an incredible opportunity to get more value to customers faster.
What didn’t accelerate at the same pace was the work that happens before building: understanding what customers actually need and deciding which problem is worth solving. Those fundamentals still take the time they take.
The result is familiar to anyone managing a product roadmap right now. Sprints are full and features are shipping. Customers are harder to read than the velocity charts suggest.
That gap has a name. In product circles we talk about technical debt, the accumulated cost of shortcuts taken during development. What we’re building alongside it now is something different: discovery debt.
What Discovery Debt Actually Is
Discovery debt is the customer understanding you skipped because shipping felt easier than learning. It accumulates quietly, the way technical debt does, but it doesn’t show up on any dashboard. No test fails. No system goes down. Velocity metrics look healthy while the product drifts from what customers actually need.
Teresa Torres flagged this pattern early in 2026: teams rushing to add AI features to their roadmaps are forgetting discovery fundamentals and reverting to feature factory behavior. The observation landed because it described something product leaders were already feeling but couldn’t name.
When delivery is slow, skipping discovery feels risky. You’ve invested months to build something, and the last thing you want is to discover you built the wrong thing. That friction forces at least a minimum of validation.
When delivery is fast, the friction disappears. You can prototype in hours and ship in days, so teams do exactly that, quickly and repeatedly, without pausing to validate direction. The assumption is that iteration will surface the right answer. Sometimes it does. More often, teams ship three technically improved versions of something customers didn’t need in the first place.
The work was real. The customer insight wasn’t.
The Opportunity Cost Nobody Counts
The obvious version of this problem is building the wrong feature and wasting a sprint or two. Leadership notices, a postmortem happens.
The harder version to see is what didn’t get built. I’ve written about this before in the context of teams conflating execution quality with value delivery — building something well, just not the right something. Discovery debt is that pattern compressed and accelerated by speed. Every cycle spent building without customer validation is a cycle not spent learning what customers actually need. As I covered last year on AI customer research, fast synthesis without good inputs produces confident-sounding conclusions that don’t hold up. The same is true upstream: fast delivery without validated discovery produces polished features customers don’t use.
An edtech team spent a significant portion of a development cycle building an AI-assisted lesson planning tool. Sales loved the demo. Executives approved it. Teachers received it, looked at it, and kept doing what they’d always done — not because they didn’t understand the tool, but because it didn’t feel meaningfully better than the workflow they’d built over years of classroom experience. The product solved a problem the organization thought teachers had. Teachers disagreed, silently, by not changing.
The features that would have mattered — the ones teachers had flagged in feedback that sat unread — got delayed by a quarter while the team iterated on something with no adoption curve. The go-to-market window for the competitive feature closed. Someone else shipped it.
That’s the compounding effect. It surfaces when NPS drops without obvious cause, or when customers keep asking for something you thought you already solved. Retention numbers tend to tell the rest of the story.
AI Didn’t Create This — But It Can Help Fix It
The answer isn’t to slow delivery. Those advances in AI and agentic tooling are capabilities worth keeping. Accelerate discovery at the same rate, and AI earns its value across the full workflow.
Torres has been building her own AI product this past year and making this case from the practitioner side. The habits she’s long taught — test assumptions early, identify which risk would kill the idea first — hold up precisely because delivery is faster now. Faster delivery makes rigorous discovery more valuable, not less.
What’s changed is how discovery itself can move. Five years ago, synthesizing a round of customer interviews was a week-long exercise. Mapping assumptions to risk levels happened in workshops that required scheduling across three teams and prototyping an alternative solution meant a design sprint. That timebox meant teams had to choose which questions to ask, because they couldn’t ask many.
Now the constraint isn’t time — it’s judgment. Synthesis takes hours. A working prototype of an alternative framing takes an afternoon. Which means the question shifts from “do we have time to validate this?” to “which assumption actually matters most?” That’s a harder question, and AI doesn’t answer it for you. But it removes the excuse that discovery is the slow part.
I’m still figuring out where “enough discovery” ends and “good enough to ship” begins, and I suspect that line moves depending on how well you understand the problem space. What I’m more confident about: AI removes the excuse that discovery takes too long. It doesn’t remove the judgment required to do it well.
Discovery debt compounds. Teams that skip validation when delivery feels easy spend the following year building at speed toward the wrong destination. The debt comes due, usually when competitive pressure or customer behavior makes visible what the metrics were hiding.
Fast doesn’t have to mean blind.
What’s on your roadmap right now that hasn’t been touched by a customer conversation in the last month?







