Wright

Trial inspection

What a 14-Day AI Coding Trial Should Let a Parent Inspect

A 14-day trial should not ask a parent to guess. It should create a clear inspection moment before billing begins.

A 14-day AI coding trial for a teen should be easy to judge. Not easy in the sense that the teen finishes a perfect product in two weeks. Easy in the sense that the parent knows what to look for before billing begins.

The inspection window matters because many education products hide behind vague progress. The parent sees lessons watched, badges earned, or time spent, but not a working thing. A trial should reduce that uncertainty.

What to inspect before day 15

  • A first working app or page that opens.
  • A simple explanation of who it helps.
  • A clear description of what works today.
  • One honest statement about what is still rough.
  • One specific next improvement.

That is enough for a parent to make a better decision. You are not judging whether the teen has become a professional developer. You are judging whether the program moved them from passive screen time into visible building.

What the trial should not imply

A 14-day trial should not imply the whole course ends after 14 days. It is the first decision window. It should also not imply guaranteed outcomes, a custom support promise, or a shortcut around the teen doing real work. The useful promise is narrower: give the parent something meaningful to inspect before the first charge.

Where Wright fits

Wright is $97/month after a 14-day free trial. Card required. $0 today. The teen starts building with AI, and the parent inspects the first app before day 15. If kept, Wright continues after day 14 at $97/month.

Common questions

What should a 14-day AI coding trial let me inspect?

It should let you inspect a working first app, the problem statement, the teen's explanation, what is still rough, and what comes next.

Does a 14-day trial mean the course ends after 14 days?

No. The trial is the inspection window. If the family keeps the membership, the course continues after the trial.

Why would a trial require a card?

A card-required trial can make sense when the program is self-serve and the cancellation point is clear. The parent should know what to inspect before day 15.