Turning Feedback Into a Simple V2
Don’t Overcomplicate It
Once you’ve got feedback, it’s tempting to tear the whole thing apart and rebuild from scratch. But you don’t need to burn Version 1 to the ground.
A “Version 2” is just a cleaner, sharper version of what you already have — not a total reinvention. The goal is to make it better, not to make it brand new.
Decide What Matters Most
Not every piece of feedback is worth acting on right away. Look at the patterns you found and ask:
Will fixing this make the offer easier to understand?
Will it help people get results faster or more easily?
Will it remove a major point of friction?
If it’s a yes to any of those, it’s a good candidate for V2.
Make the Changes Manageable
The fastest way to stall out is to overload your to-do list. Keep your update list short enough to actually finish.
Think:
Add or improve one lesson or module
Rewrite a confusing section of your sales page
Fix a tech issue that’s been causing problems
Small, focused improvements add up faster than massive overhauls.
Keep the Core the Same
If your offer worked for people — even with a few rough edges — that means the core idea is solid. Keep that in place.
Changing too much at once makes it harder to tell which changes actually helped.
Tell People What’s New
Once your V2 is ready, share the updates with your audience. This does two things:
Builds trust by showing you listen and improve
Gives you a reason to talk about your offer again
Even small changes can be worth mentioning — sometimes that’s the nudge someone needed to buy.
The Bottom Line
A strong V2 isn’t about perfection. It’s about small, smart tweaks that make your offer clearer, smoother, and easier to buy into. The simpler your changes, the faster you can get them out into the world.