You already pay for ChatGPT, Claude, Copilot, AirGap AI, or some combination of all of them. You can see usage. You can see logins. You have no idea whether your team is any good at prompting them.
Not a course catalog. Not a 30-hour bootcamp. Not a benchmark you can't verify.
One software subscription. $29 a month. 912+ courses. Real-time AI-scored prompts. A verifiable certificate when the work is done. That's it.
A Fortune 500 sales org came to us after rolling out an enterprise AI license for 800 reps. Six months in, they had no idea if anyone was actually getting better. They had logins. They had usage stats. They had no way to tell a good prompt from a bad one — or a fluent rep from a stuck one.
We ran them through the Academy for one month. The next quarter they had a quality score for every person on the team and a tiered training plan for the 30% who were lost.
That's when we packaged it as software anyone can use. Because the gap most teams hit is not licenses. It's not training hours. It's that nobody is grading the work — so nobody knows where they stand.
The Academy used to be locked behind our $2,500/seat enterprise engagements. Today it's $29 a month for any individual or small team that wants it.
The software is the product. You sign in, you take lessons, the AI scores your prompts, the platform issues certificates. We've spent two years tightening the loop. You get the result — in your team, in your inbox, in your LinkedIn profile — without ever buying our enterprise engagement.
Two years ago, AI literacy meant "can your people open a chat window." That bar was low and most teams have cleared it.
Today the bar is fluency — the difference between a 40% prompt and a 95% prompt. Same employee, same tool, same task, totally different outcome.
So the problem shifted.
The problem now is paying for licenses, paying for tools, paying for training hours, and still having no idea whether your team is using AI well or badly. Was it the prompt? The context? The structure? The wrong tool for the task? The skill itself?
The teams winning right now are not the ones with the most licenses. They are the ones who know — person by person — exactly where their fluency sits and what to ship them next.
The Academy software gives you that — for $29 a month.
The output of the Academy is not a completion rate. It is not a self-assessment. It is not a "fluency vibe."
It is real prompts written by real learners, scored in real time by AI against an evaluation rubric tuned on $20M+ of enterprise training data.
The product is software. You log in. You pick a course. You write a prompt. The platform grades it and shows you exactly what to fix. Repeat until the score is consistent. The certificate fires when the platform agrees you're there.
The same software your team uses solo at $29/month is the platform our enterprise customers roll out at scale. Same scoring rubric. Same library. Same verifiable certificates.
"This is the same platform we use for the $2,500/seat enterprise engagement — now available on month-to-month."
Here's the text we got from Daniel six weeks after his 24-person cohort started the Academy.
This works for any team using any LLM-based AI tool.
ChatGPT. Claude. Gemini. Microsoft Copilot. Perplexity. AirGap AI. Internal LLMs. Anything that takes a prompt and returns a response.
Sales. Marketing. Customer service. Operations. HR. IT. Legal. Finance. Pharma. Logistics. Manufacturing. Healthcare.
If your team is using AI and you want to know whether they're actually getting value from it — this is for you.
The software you'll keep running every month, not the bootcamp you do once and forget.
They run the same 30-hour curriculum on every team, end with a survey, and leave you no way to grade anyone. Six months later your fluency variance is the same as the day you started.
With the Academy: $29 a month per seat. A score for every person, every prompt.
Useful when you have it. Most teams don't — and the ones that do are not running a fluency rubric across every department weekly.
The Academy ships that rubric with the product. From day one.
Wrong assumption. People don't underuse AI because they don't have the seat. They underuse it because nobody ever taught them what a good prompt looks like.
With the Academy: every license dollar produces a measurable fluency outcome. Not seat sprawl.
This is not for everyone.
If you want someone else to "do AI" for your team while they sit back — this is not for you.
But if you bought the licenses, you watched the usage charts, you ran the lunch-and-learns, and you still cannot tell which of your people can actually use AI well?
If you're tired of completion rates that tell you nothing, vendors who can't show you a single learner score, and frameworks that don't survive contact with a real customer email?
Your team needs the Academy.
A generic AI training vendor charges $30,000–$80,000 to deliver the same deck to every team and leaves you with zero individual scores.
The Academy gives you a per-learner prompt quality number you can sort, filter, and act on. For $29 a month.
An internal AI program costs $200k–$1M a year and still does not run a fluency benchmark across every role.
The Academy ships that benchmark as software. You run it every month. You own the rubric.
Buying more seats, more tools, more dashboards — and still finding 40% of the team is not actually using any of it.
The Academy finds out who, what, and why first. Then you buy what already has a learner.
Not because it's worth less. Because once you see what the platform produces, you'll understand why companies pay $2,500 a seat to roll out the full enterprise program. This is us pulling back the curtain on purpose.
But that's not what you're paying today.
We're confident enough in the product to put it on month-to-month and let the scoring loop sell the renewal.
We could charge $59 a month. Most platforms in this category do, and we could justify it — the curriculum is built off enterprise engagements that average $2,500 per seat.
$29 a month exists because we'd rather have you in the platform every day than have a higher MRR with a smaller user base. The product gets better when more people are scoring prompts inside it.
The $29 monthly is the introductory tier for individuals and small teams. Enterprise rollouts (30+ seats with SSO, cohort dashboards, role-based learning paths) are quoted separately — usually as the next conversation after a team gets their first 5 certificates.
If $29 a month is wrong for you, the upgrade and the enterprise quote are both one click away from your account.
You've seen the per-learner scores on this page. You know exactly what the platform produces. Start, score a few prompts yourself, cancel if it isn't what we say it is.
With AI, anyone can write a prompt.
That answer costs $29 a month inside the Academy.