We’ve created a fully experiential curriculum like nothing before.

No lectures. No textbooks.
100% experiential.

Fellows spend over 2,000 hours across an entire year building professional-grade products in cross-functional teams.

2,000+ hours building

2,000+ hours spent working on a dozen different software products facilitates the level of repetition and the variety of experiences needed for you to achieve technical mastery.

Reps + variety = Technical mastery

An illustration of a multi-level office with several people working. The top level shows a woman with dark hair talking on the phone at a desk labeled "President." The middle level has three sections: one with a man presenting to two seated people with laptops, one with two people working on computers, and one with two people collaborating at a shared desk. The bottom level features a man sitting at a desk labeled with an office logo, with a black sofa and potted plants nearby.

You spend all year building products in cross-functional teams under real-world conditions so you leave with the soft skills every employer wants.

Soft skills mastery

You learn to do your job with an AI-first mindset to make yourself 10x more productive and effective.

AI-first approach

Résumé-Centric

We determined what skills, competencies, and experiences the ideal experienced Product Builder had and then worked backwards to design an intense 12-month regiment of software builds optimized to produce that elite Builder.

Product builds increase in sophistication & duration and span different product types.

We employ a continuous failure pedagogy where Fellows are given minimal instruction and must navigate challenges independently (individually and with your team) until you hit a truly insurmountable roadblock.

Then a pega6 veteran steps in to coach you up with the expertise you need to get you “unstuck.”

This approach ensures that pega6 Fellows are highly adept at autonomous problem solving .

Continuous failure creates problem solvers.

Illustration of a man standing in the center of a circular maze, thinking with a finger on his chin.