You're not lacking effort
You've been learning in the wrong order from the start
"I've watched YouTube and read books,
but I still don't know what to do"
"I know plenty of methods,
but I just can't make a decision"
"I let other people's opinions guide me
and keep making the same mistakes"
"I've tried everything,
but I don't know what's right"
"The more methods there are,
the easier it is to get confused"
Instead of fragmented knowledge, you build thinking skills that cut to the essence of the market
Not "do it this way," but "why should you make this decision?"
You can build a solid thinking system so you're no longer swayed by other people's opinions
Foundations of first principles thinking in 2 lessons
You've taken in a lot of information,
but struggle to judge for yourself
You've tried various methods,
but keep making the same mistakes
You want to learn everything
the right way from the ground up
You want an
unshakeable thinking system
Honest experiences from real course participants
Honestly, at first I thought it would be just another standard course
14:30But after the first lesson I understood why I'd been feeling lost the whole time
14:31The problem was that I was trying to learn too many methods at once
14:32I'm finally thinking about what my own criteria are
14:34I spent over a year learning on YouTube
19:10The more I watched, the more confused and anxious I became
19:11This course was different. It doesn't tell you what to do — it teaches you how to think
19:13For the first time I feel like I can decide with my own judgment
19:15A friend recommended it — really good
10:18It explains the essential differences between the options
10:19Now I finally understand why that matters so much
10:20Glad I learned this before starting my career
10:22The market always felt scary and complicated to me
21:40After this course I finally understand why that was
21:42The part about cognitive biases especially resonated with me
21:43My fear of the market has dropped a lot
21:45
With this free 2-lesson course
you'll develop your own decision criteria