Start learning free
Best if you are new, scattered, or want one clear path through the fundamentals before paying for anything.
Open the free trackLoading brilliance...
Routing layer
Use this page if you are deciding between the free track, community support, a focused call, or a project brief. The goal is to get you to the right next step quickly.
Best if you are new, scattered, or want one clear path through the fundamentals before paying for anything.
Open the free trackBest if you want discussion, accountability, and a place to ask better questions while you keep building.
Join the communityBest for debugging, technical questions, architecture decisions, or learning direction when a direct session will save time.
Book a focused callBest when the need is bigger than a lesson and you want help scoping or building a product, MVP, or system.
Start a project briefStart with the free track. Do not overcomplicate the first step. Learn the browser, structure, styling, layout, JavaScript, and forms in order.
Create an account, join the community, and use a focused call when the bottleneck is technical, structural, or decision-based.
Use a focused call for clarity and a project brief when the work is larger, multi-step, or execution-heavy.
No. The academy is designed to take learners from fundamentals to real projects, with beginner-friendly entry points and clearer next steps.
Start with the free essentials track. It is the cleanest route into browser thinking, semantic structure, styling, layout, JavaScript, forms, data flow, and shipping habits.
Use the community for discussion, the support hub for direction, and book a call when you need focused technical help or product clarity.
Yes. Labs, assessments, and mentoring routes are built to help you move from passive learning into applied work and better execution.
If you need technical direction, product help, or a scoped build path, use the project brief or book a call depending on the level of support you need.
Choose the path that matches the kind of help you need. That usually leads to faster and better responses than sending a vague message.