Just my opinion (or perhaps I've misunderstood) - but this solves a problem that is better solved by a paper and pencil. Or a whiteboard.
On my mac I have a few different tools that I could use to make these sorts of diagrams.
I never use them.
I always revert to a paper, pencil and frantic scribbles - that's what works best as an individual and collaboratively, I've found. It's unintuitive and adds hurdles to the design process when you have to keep clicking "edit" "save" etc - I just want to rub things out and scribble.
The only time I think this would be useful is when doing UX brainstorming with a remote team, but I think that is a very niche market - too niche to make it worthwhile building this MVP. Unless you're aiming at enterprise where you only need a few customers to make it worthwhile ;)
When you've finished sketching out your flows on paper or on a whiteboard, how do you share them? Scan them in or take a photo? And then when someone points out that a change needs to be made to one of the screens or an entire section of the flow, how do you effectively distribute and communicate this change to everyone on the team?
Paper sketches are great, but they become pretty inefficient when you have to keep multiple people on the same page (pardon the pun) during a constantly changing product development project.
Just my opinion (or perhaps I've misunderstood) - but this solves a problem that is better solved by a paper and pencil. Or a whiteboard.
On my mac I have a few different tools that I could use to make these sorts of diagrams.
I never use them.
I always revert to a paper, pencil and frantic scribbles - that's what works best as an individual and collaboratively, I've found. It's unintuitive and adds hurdles to the design process when you have to keep clicking "edit" "save" etc - I just want to rub things out and scribble.
The only time I think this would be useful is when doing UX brainstorming with a remote team, but I think that is a very niche market - too niche to make it worthwhile building this MVP. Unless you're aiming at enterprise where you only need a few customers to make it worthwhile ;)