Common Myths About App Development, Debunked
By Akhil Jayalekshmi Madhu
Ask five people what it takes to build an app, and you’ll likely get five very different answers.
“It’s too expensive.” “Just copy what that other app is doing.” “Launch it and they will come.” “It’s a one-time project.” “You need to hire a big team in Silicon Valley.”
The truth? Most of these are myths—harmless-sounding, but often costly in the long run. At Comet Web Solutions LLP in India, we’ve worked with everyone from first-time founders to established businesses venturing into mobile for the first time. And we hear these misconceptions all the time.
Let’s unpack some of the most common app development myths—and share what’s actually true, from the ground level.
Myth 1: App Development Is Only for Big Companies
Nope.
In fact, some of our most successful clients are small business owners or solo entrepreneurs. What they have isn’t a massive budget—it’s a clear idea and the will to test it.
Take the example of a Kochi-based fitness trainer who wanted to shift his offline programs online. We helped him build a simple app—nothing fancy. Just basic user login, video content, and payment gateway. That was enough. Within six months, he doubled his monthly revenue.
Apps don’t need to be big. They need to solve a problem.
Myth 2: You Need Every Feature at Launch
This one trips up a lot of founders. The temptation is real: add a chat system, loyalty program, location tracking, push notifications—all on day one.
But more features don’t equal more value. Often, they just confuse users.
We advise building a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) first. Focus on the core function—what the app must do. The extras can come later, based on real feedback.
Launching small isn’t a weakness. It’s smart.
Myth 3: Once It’s Built, You’re Done
We wish that were true.
Apps are living things. Devices change, user expectations evolve, bugs emerge, and platforms update their guidelines.
Post-launch, you’ll need:
Regular updates
Bug fixes
User support
Analytics review
And often… content refreshes
At Comet Web Solutions LLP, we bake this into every project conversation. An app without ongoing support is like a garden left unattended. It doesn't grow. It decays.
Myth 4: Coding Is Everything
Not quite.
Yes, clean code matters. But equally important are:
UI/UX design – how the app feels
Onboarding – the first-time user experience
Performance – speed, load time, responsiveness
Retention hooks – things that keep users coming back
We’ve seen beautifully coded apps fail because the design was confusing. And we’ve seen modest codebases succeed because the flow was intuitive and helpful.
Good code is just one piece of a much bigger puzzle.
Myth 5: If You Build It, They Will Come
This one is the most dangerous of all.
Launching an app without a marketing plan is like opening a shop and never putting up a sign. No traffic, no users, no results.
That’s why we always discuss go-to-market strategy during development. App Store Optimization (ASO), social media teasers, launch emails, influencer collaborations—they’re not extras. They’re essentials.
Even the best app needs help to get discovered.
Real Talk
There was a time when building an app required Silicon Valley investors and five-person dev teams. That time has passed.
Today, tools are better. Knowledge is more accessible. And smaller agencies like Comet Web Solutions LLP can deliver powerful, elegant apps at a fraction of the old-school cost—without cutting corners.
As nominees for the 2025 Go Global Awards, taking place this November in London, we’re part of a global conversation about how innovation is becoming more inclusive. More accessible. And more essential to small businesses, not just big corporations.
That’s the future we believe in—and one we’re proud to help shape.
Final Thought
App development isn’t a mystery. It’s a process. And like any good process, it works best when it’s grounded in reality—not assumptions.
If you’ve been sitting on an idea, but myths have held you back… maybe it’s time to look again. The path might be easier—and more affordable—than you think.














