Everyone else is selling you hundreds of practice problems and months of grinding. You don't need it. If you graduated — or you're on track to — you already know enough to pass. You just weren't taught how to take the exam. I'll show you.
Passing the FE isn't about grinding more problems. It's about knowing exactly which ones matter and how to attack them.
The FE isn't a comprehensive final over your entire degree. It's a basic competency check with a 700-page reference manual sitting on your desk the whole time.
You don't need to memorize anything. You don't need to master every edge case. You don't need to do hundreds of practice problems. The exam is checking whether you remember the fundamentals you learned in the first weeks of your core classes — and whether you can find what you don't remember in the handbook.
The prep industry has convinced a generation of engineers that passing the FE means reteaching yourself your entire degree. That's how they sell hundred-dollar books and thousand-dollar courses to people who failed once and are now scared into doing more of what didn't work.
You're not failing because you don't know enough. You're failing because you're preparing for an exam that doesn't exist.
Every other FE program asks for hundreds of hours, hundreds of problems, and months of your life — for the same pass/fail outcome as everyone else.
My approach inverts it. Same pass. Fraction of the time. None of the grinding.
You don't memorize — you learn to find anything in under 10 seconds. That's the skill the exam is actually testing.
Three passes per section, easiest questions first. It's how you create the time everyone says they ran out of.
Most wrong answers look wrong if you slow down for 3 seconds. We train that instinct.
For engineers still close to the material — currently in school, recent grads, or anyone within a year or two of their coursework.
For engineers who've been out of school for a while and need to rebuild foundations — but not by redoing their entire degree.
Every person I've coached has passed. Not because they got smarter in a few weeks. Because they stopped preparing for the wrong exam.
I took the exam four times before working with you. The difference between you and all of the other test prep companies I've tried is your hacks are systematic and actually usable under a time crunch. Since passing, I got a new job with a $16k raise.
It took me seven tries to pass. You showed me I had the knowledge in my head already, and that it's all about mindset and how to approach the exam. I've since completed my masters and collected Seven PE Licenses.
Worth every penny, you're the only tutor that truly helped me.
I passed! I got a new job offer and will be designing substations.
I passed! Thank you for your undying support
I have degrees in Electrical Engineering and Chemistry. I passed the EIT without studying.
When my graduating class took the FE, I passed. Classmates with higher GPAs than mine didn't. That didn't make sense to me — until I started talking to them and realized I wasn't smarter. I just took the exam differently than we'd been taught to.
School trains you to aim for perfection and grind hundreds of problems. That works eventually. It's also wildly inefficient, and it's not what the FE actually rewards.
I've since coached first-time takers, people who've failed 5+ times, and engineers a decade out of school. Electrical, mechanical, civil, environmental. The method works across disciplines because the exam is the same shape for everyone: basic competency, open handbook, time-boxed.
You don't need to be a savant. You need a different map.
The prep industry's business model runs on repeat customers. You fail, you panic, you buy the next tier. That's not a bug — that's the whole plan.
Mine is the opposite. You pay once, and I'm with you until you pass. Guaranteed. No upsells. No "premium" package. No second course when the first one doesn't work.