12
Monthly project briefs
Twelve monthly project briefs
Each brief is designed to end in inspectable work, then increase the scope the next month. Completion, outside users, and sales depend on the teen doing the work. They are not guaranteed.
The proof behind the method
Wright is run by Ibrahim, a software engineer. His 15-year-old brother, who had only played Roblox before this, used the first-build method and shipped a real working app in 14 days.
14-day free trial. Card required. Nothing charged for 14 days. If kept, Wright continues at $97/month after day 14. Cancel anytime.
Below is the roadmap: twelve example briefs and the skill each one is meant to train. The specific product can change to fit the teen.
Briefs viewed
0 / 12
Suggested pace
Monthly
Final brief
Capstone
Months 1 to 4
It starts small. A form, a button, and a parent inspection.
Month 1 / Family
A first brief built around a familiar household problem.
The teen designs a simple place to log chores and calculate a running total. A parent can test the link and inspect whether the data saves correctly.
Possible portfolio evidenceA working link plus a short note about what the parent tested.
Month 2 / One Thing
One screen, one calculation, and a hard scope limit.
The brief covers a bill, tip, and uneven orders. The teen has to decide what belongs on one screen and what should be left out.
Possible portfolio evidenceA mobile calculator that a parent can test with sample numbers.
Month 3 / Local Business
A booking prototype shaped around a local service business.
The teen studies how appointment requests work, then builds a phone-first prototype for choosing a slot. A business owner may review it, but adoption is not assumed.
Possible portfolio evidenceA tested booking prototype and notes from any feedback received.
Month 4 / Rebuild
The first brief, rebuilt after three months of practice.
The teen revisits the same idea, adds account access, saves history, and compares the new version with the first one.
Possible portfolio evidenceVersion one and version two, shown side by side with a change log.
Months 5 to 8
The briefs add feedback, schedules, and group workflows.
Month 5 / No Screen
A scheduled program instead of another screen to watch.
The teen builds a test that checks one public price on a schedule and records a change. Any alert setup stays under the parent's account and supervision.
Possible portfolio evidenceA scheduler log showing when the check ran and what it recorded.
Month 6 / Self
A study planning brief built around the teen's own week.
Assignments and dates go in once. The product works backward from each deadline and proposes a study plan the teen can edit.
Possible portfolio evidenceA planner populated with sample or real dates chosen by the family.
Month 7 / Team
A group-data brief designed for fast phone entry.
Points, minutes, or attendance can be entered from a phone. The teen tests the flow with sample data and may ask a coach what would make it useful.
Possible portfolio evidenceA working team dashboard with sample data and an inspection note.
Month 8 / Free to Use
One scheduling link instead of a long message thread.
People can mark available times and the product shows the overlap. The teen can invite a small, parent-approved group to test it.
Possible portfolio evidenceA shareable poll plus any feedback from approved testers.
Month 9 / Value test / Parent supervised
The teen creates an original digital template and explains who it is for. A parent decides whether a real checkout is appropriate and owns every account.
The inspection question
Clear?
Can another person explain what the product does and who it helps? A sale is not required or promised. The learning goal is a clear offer and a working test flow.
Possible portfolio evidenceA product page, a test checkout, and notes from any buyer interview.
14-day free trial. Card required. Nothing charged for 14 days. If kept, Wright continues at $97/month after day 14. Cancel anytime.
Months 10 to 12
Deeper constraints, then a capstone the teen chooses.
Month 10 / Teacher
A workflow prototype for an adult reviewer.
The teen builds a sample tracker that shows which slips are recorded and creates a clean list to print. Any school use depends on permission and privacy review.
Possible portfolio evidenceA privacy-safe prototype using sample records.
Month 11 / Rebuild Deep
The month 3 prototype, rebuilt with safer account flows.
The teen returns to booking and adds test-mode deposits, reminders, and account access. A parent controls every payment or messaging account.
Possible portfolio evidenceA second booking prototype with a clear test plan and change log.
Month 12 / Capstone / Teen chosen, parent inspected
A product chosen by the teen and reviewed by the parent.
The teen chooses a problem, scopes the product, builds it, and responds to feedback. The parent still owns accounts, privacy decisions, and every dollar.
Possible portfolio evidenceA working capstone plus a written record of decisions, tests, and revisions.
The one story we can tell, because it is true
Ibrahim's brother is 15. Before this, his computer experience was playing Roblox. He used the first-build method and shipped a real working app in 14 days.
The roadmap above shows the kind of briefs the membership is designed around. It is not a record of his work or a promise that another teen will get the same result.
What the track contains
12
Monthly project briefs
12
Parent inspection points
1
Teen-chosen capstone brief
A completed build can support a portfolio claim only when the link works and the teen can explain the decisions behind it.
How completed work may be described
The parent should verify every line against the working artifact. Wright does not promise admissions, employment, users, or revenue outcomes.
The decision in plain numbers
The trial is 14 days. A card is required, but nothing is charged during those 14 days.
If the family keeps Wright after day 14, it continues at $97 per month. Cancel before day 15 to pay nothing.
Wright supplies the project briefs and structure. Results still depend on the teen doing the work and the parent inspecting it.
14-day free trial. Card required. Nothing charged for 14 days. If kept, Wright continues at $97/month after day 14. Cancel anytime.