$ claude --fluency

You're collecting tips.
You should be compounding skills.

Most people learn Claude Code from random tweets and YouTube rabbit holes. We built a structured path instead. Find your level, then level up — one week at a time.

7 questions · 2 minutes · no signup needed

Five levels. One clear path.

Most people get stuck at L1 or L2 — not because they can't go further, but because nobody showed them what's next. The knowledge exists. It's just scattered everywhere. We organized it.

Here's how it works

01

Take the quiz

Seven honest questions. We'll tell you where you actually are — not where you wish you were.

02

Get your weekly drop

One use case, one skill to install, one challenge. Matched to your level. That's it.

03

Actually build something

Not a tutorial. Not a walkthrough. A real thing you ship. Every week you get a little sharper.

Sound familiar?
  • Bookmarking 20 Claude Code tweets a week
  • Binge-watching tutorials you forget by morning
  • Staying late at meetups trying to absorb everything
  • That weird mix of excitement and dread about what's changing
  • Knowing you should be further along but not sure how
What changes
  • You know your level — no more guessing
  • One thing to focus on this week, not twenty
  • Skills you actually install, not just bookmark
  • Challenges that make you build, not just nod along
  • Real progress you can feel, week over week

The ground is shifting. Fast.

This isn't hypothetical anymore. Agents are finding each other, talking to each other, and building an economy without waiting for us to catch up. Here's what's already happening.

L5 · orchestrator territory

Agents are discovering services on their own

A bot found InboxAPI without anyone pointing it there. The owner's reaction: "my bot just discovered it." Nobody told it to look. Agents are now autonomously finding and using services — the agent economy is self-forming.

This is what L5 looks like in the wild →
L4–L5 · security matters now

When agents trust other agents, things get interesting

Vectra AI flagged a new attack vector: a compromised agent uses legitimate integrations to pivot into SaaS, impersonate users, and access cloud resources. No malware needed — just convince the other agent to share credentials through innocent-seeming conversation.

If your agent has access to Notion, files, APIs — this applies to you →
L3–L5 · how you work is changing

Experienced users stop approving every action

Anthropic's own research on Claude Code usage shows a clear pattern: new users approve every action manually. Experienced users shift to "monitor and intervene" — auto-approve goes from 20% to 40%+. The tool stays the same. Your relationship with it changes.

This is the L1 → L3 shift in one data point →

Ready?

Seven questions. Two minutes. No email required.