Wright

Your kid ships a real product you can open on your own phone.

You are right to be skeptical of a program like this. Most are babysitting with a certificate. Wright is different: your 11 to 16 year old does the real first step free, with no card, and you watch what they actually make before you decide anything.

Before I asked any parent to believe this, I put my own younger brother through it, and I watched him build something real.

The Wright dashboard showing the twelve build steps a child ships through, the first three complete.
Twelve steps. Your kid ships a real thing at the end of each one, and you can watch the first one happen free.

Who is on the other side of this

Wright is built and run by one person, Ibrahim, and that is on purpose. I read every application myself, and I answer every email myself, usually within 12 hours. Reply to anything I send and you will see. There is no support queue and no offshore team, and when your kid ships their first real thing, the note that says I saw it comes from me. You work directly with the person who built this and stands behind every part of it.

Why I can say this

The most honest thing I can tell you is what I did with my own family. One of the first kids to go through Wright is my younger brother. He sat down and built a real, working tool, the kind of thing you would assume an adult made, and I got to watch a kid actually do it.

An illustration of the kind of tool a kid in this program built. Not a screenshot, and not real student work. The real one is live and connects to a student's Canvas to show what is due.

I am not telling you this so you will trust a brand you have never heard of. I am telling you because if my own younger brother could build something real here, I think you already suspect your kid could too.

Who Wright is not for

I read every application myself and keep each group small, so I will be straight about who this is not for. It is not for a kid who will not sit down and do the work themselves, because the whole model is that your kid builds and you inspect, you never do it for them. It is not for a parent looking for a hands-off after-school drop-off, because it is self-paced at home with no live calls and a short weekly check-in from you. And it is built for 11 to 16, so a younger kid is better off waiting a year and starting the moment they are in range.

You watch your own kid build the real thing first.

Here is what checking us actually looks like, and it costs you nothing. Your kid sits down and does the real first module, free, with no card and no login. Over a sitting or two they write their first real product brief, naming one real person with one real problem, with a coach guiding every step. That brief is a real thing your kid made, and you read it. If watching your own kid produce that does not tell you whether this is right for them, nothing a stranger could say would. There is no card at this step and nothing to cancel.

Watch your kid do the real first step, free

Or take 30 seconds to see how Wright fits your kid, just below.

Your part in this, every week

You are not dropping your kid into a screen and hoping. Every one of the twelve modules comes with a short parent guide that tells you exactly what to look at and the two or three questions to ask at the kitchen table. You inspect the work; you never do it. You will always know what is happening without needing to be technical. There are no live calls to attend and nothing to schedule, the guide is how you stay in it on your own time.

What about the accounts, the money, and the AI

The payment account your kid sets up later is theirs, opened with you present, and the money flows to an account your family controls. Your kid connects their own accounts and builds their own software, so Wright does not touch your family's school logins. And I read every application myself, your kid works self-paced at home, so you can sit beside them and watch the whole thing. You can read exactly how we handle your information in our privacy policy.

But isn't this just more screen time?

Most screen time is consumption, your kid inside someone else's app. Wright is the opposite kind. The program ends in a real, working product, and you cannot fake a working thing by clicking through a video. The output itself is the proof it was not passive. Same hours, pointed at building instead of scrolling.

Under a minute to find out

Is Wright a fit for your kid?

Question 1 of 6

When your child has free time and a screen, which is closest to true right now?

Question 2 of 6

How old is the child you are applying for? Wright is built for the window when this skill compounds the most.

Question 3 of 6

Picture your child a few months from now showing you something they built that real people are using. What is the first thing you would feel?

Question 4 of 6

If Wright is the right fit, who decides whether your child starts?

Question 5 of 6

Which sounds most like you as a parent?

Question 6 of 6

Wright is 397 dollars a month with a 14 day free trial, cancel anytime. If your child is the right fit, is that an investment you are ready to make in them?

That is about one Saturday SAT-prep class plus one weekly Kumon hour combined, except it ends in a real working business in your kid's name, not a worksheet folder.

Last step

Your kid's result is ready.

Tell me where to send it and I will show you the full result now, built from what you just told me, plus how your kid does the real first module free. The same lands in your inbox so it is there when you are ready, and I read every reply myself.

I send your kid's result to your inbox, then a short series of notes from me about getting started. No spam, unsubscribe in one click.

Result

Your child is exactly who Wright was built for.

Start free. Watch your kid ship first.

Nothing is charged today. The card holds your spot, and day 15 is the first charge. Free for 14 days, cancel in one click before then and pay nothing. Then $397 a month, cancel any month in one click. Your kid keeps everything they build either way.

What your kid ends up with

Your kid will have what almost no kid has.

By the end, your kid has shipped a real product that a stranger paid for, something most working adults have never done.

This is not theory. It is the same shape as the tool one of the first kids in this program already shipped, a live tool that connects to a student's Canvas and shows them what is due. That is what the end of this looks like, built by a kid, not described by a brochure.

Here is the order this happens in. The first real thing, the product brief, your kid ships inside the free 14 days, and you read it before any charge. The domain, the live software, the payment account, and the first paying customer come step by step over the modules that follow. You start by watching the first one happen for free, then decide if the rest is worth it for your kid.

How it works

Twelve modules, self-paced, with a new one opening every five days so there is always room to ship the current one first. Two to three hours a week, mostly weekend afternoons. No live calls, no chat rooms. Your kid runs through the modules in their own kitchen, with a coach prompt-skill inside the AI tools guiding them at each step. Most kids reach their first paying customer around Module 6, and finish with a portfolio piece a college can verify in 90 seconds. The self-paced, no-live-calls shape is why this drops cleanly into a homeschool plan or an afterschool week, and the shipped product is a real artifact you can put on a transcript, not a seat-time certificate. There is no fixed clock, the right pace is one module at a time with the work actually shipped. Founded by Ibrahim, who reads every application himself. There are no live calls. What there is instead is a shared build log where the kids in the program share what they are working on, and a founder who reads every message. Your kid sees real work from real peers, not a feed.

Pricing

By the end, your kid has shipped a real product that a stranger paid for, something most working adults have never done.

$397 / month

Kumon plus AoPS together runs $400 to $700 a month and ends in a worksheet folder. Stanford Pre-Collegiate Summer is $7,500 for four weeks and ends in a certificate. Wright is $397 a month and ends in a real working business in your kid's name. Start with a free 14 day trial. Nothing is charged today. The card holds your spot, the way you reserve a seat, and day 15 is the first charge. If it is not right, you cancel in one click before then and pay nothing. Cancel any month after that in one click from your Stripe portal.

Questions parents ask

Has any kid in the program actually built something real?

Yes, and here is the honest version. One of the first kids in Wright is my own younger brother. He went through this and built a tool that connects to a student's Canvas account and shows them what is due, all in one place, and it is live. A kid in this program built it. Yours could too.

Can I see it work on my own kid before I pay anything?

Yes. The real Module 1 is free at wright.school/start, with no card and no login. Your kid sits down, names one real person with one real problem, and writes their first product brief with a coach guiding them. You read it. That is a real thing your kid made, and it is the clearest signal you will get of whether Wright is right for them. Most parents who watch their kid finish the free first step start the trial the same week, because by then they have seen it with their own eyes.

$397 a month is more than my other enrichment lines. Why pay it?

Kumon, AoPS, Russian Math, and Stanford Pre-Collegiate Summer produce a grade. Wright produces a 13 year old who has secured an internet domain in their own name, set up a payment processing system that handles real customers, and shipped software to a live production environment. Three capabilities most adults you know do not have. One subscription. The math: one Saturday SAT prep class plus one weekly Kumon hour combined is roughly the same monthly cost. The difference is what your kid ends up with. By the end, your kid has shipped a real product that a stranger paid for, something most working adults have never done. Start with a free 14-day trial, no charge until day 15.

My kid does not know how to code. Is that a problem?

Your kid does not type code. They type instructions in English and the tools build the product. The same tools senior engineers at OpenAI, Anthropic, and Stripe use to build their own work. The same tools most working software engineers have not yet learned. Your 12 year old uses them on Saturday afternoons. This is the capability the next generation of work requires and no school is teaching yet.

Is this just expensive screen time?

Most screen time is consumption, your kid inside someone else's app. Wright is the opposite kind. The program ends in a real, working product, and you cannot fake a working thing by clicking through a video. The output itself is the proof it was not passive. Same hours, pointed at building instead of scrolling. If you want the longer version, I wrote it here: screen time, creator not consumer.

What if we start and it is not for us?

The first 14 days are free, and they are the test. You watch your own kid open Module 1 and write their first real brief, and you read it yourself before any charge. Cancel before day 15 and you pay nothing at all. Cancel any month after that in one click from your Stripe portal. I keep the exits this easy on purpose, because no family should feel trapped into something their kid has outgrown. The domain they staked, the software they shipped, and the payment system they set up are theirs to keep forever, whatever you decide.

More questions? Email [email protected]. See how we handle your information in our privacy policy.

Three reasons the risk is on me

You try this and decide for yourself. Here is how.

I read every application myself, so I keep each group small enough to do that well.

A few months from now, your kid has done what most adults you know have never done.

See if Wright fits your kid. 30 sec.