Product Principles
Why Principles Matter
Features change.
Interfaces evolve.
Technology advances.
Artificial Intelligence improves.
Programming languages come and go.
What should never change are the principles that guide how we build.
Product principles are the foundation for every decision we make.
Whenever we disagree about a feature, a design or a roadmap, we should return to these principles.
The right decision is usually the one most aligned with them.
Principle One - The Learning Environment Must Think
This is our most important principle.
Every feature we build should answer one question.
Does this make the learning environment think?
Thinking means more than generating text.
A thinking environment notices. Remembers. Reasons. Adapts. Acts. Supports. Coordinates. Learns.
If a feature simply stores information without increasing intelligence, it should be questioned.
Storage is necessary.
Intelligence creates value.
Principle Two - AI Is Invisible
Artificial Intelligence should not feel like a separate feature.
Learners should not constantly think about “using AI.”
Instead, they should feel that Maigie naturally understands their learning journey.
The best AI is often the one users forget exists because it quietly improves every experience.
Whenever possible, AI should disappear into the product.
Principle Three - Reduce Decisions
Learning already requires difficult thinking.
The platform should eliminate unnecessary decisions.
Learners should not spend time asking:
What should I study next?
When should I revise?
Who should I study with?
What did I forget?
The platform should answer these questions before they are asked.
Every unnecessary decision removed creates more energy for learning.
Principle Four - Collaboration Before Isolation
Learning is stronger together.
Whenever appropriate, features should encourage discussion, peer support and shared learning rather than isolated experiences.
Individual learning remains important.
Collaborative learning accelerates growth.
The platform should strengthen both.
Principle Five - Momentum Over Motivation
Motivation is unpredictable.
Momentum is designable.
Rather than relying on inspiration, the platform should create systems that make learning easier to continue.
Small consistent progress is more valuable than occasional intense effort.
Every interaction should increase the likelihood that the learner returns tomorrow.
Principle Six - Progress Over Activity
Time spent learning is not success.
Messages sent are not success.
Videos watched are not success.
The objective is measurable improvement.
Features should optimise for understanding, retention and mastery rather than engagement alone.
Principle Seven - Respect Human Educators
Teachers, tutors and mentors remain central to learning.
Artificial Intelligence exists to amplify their abilities, not replace them.
Whenever AI performs a task, it should create more time for meaningful human interaction.
Principle Eight - Every Feature Must Strengthen the System
No feature exists independently.
Every feature should improve multiple parts of the learning ecosystem.
Courses improve discussions. Discussions improve AI understanding. AI improves revision. Revision improves mastery. Mastery improves confidence. Confidence improves participation. Participation improves the community.
The platform should become more valuable as its components interact.
Principle Nine - Build for Scale, Design for Simplicity
The platform should support a single learner and an entire university using the same underlying concepts.
Complexity belongs in the system.
Simplicity belongs in the experience.
Users should feel that powerful technology is easy to use.
Principle Ten - Earn Trust Every Day
Education is deeply personal.
Learners trust us with their goals, struggles, questions and progress.
We must earn that trust continuously.
Through transparency. Privacy. Reliability. Fairness. Responsible AI.
And by always acting in the learner’s best interest.
Our Commitment
Technology will continue to evolve.
Our principles should not.
Whenever uncertainty arises, we return to one question.
Does this help people learn better?
If the answer is yes, we continue.
If the answer is no, we rethink.
These principles are not constraints.
They are the foundation upon which Maigie will be built for decades to come.