Built for investors who want to know where they actually break.
Most investment education focuses on what to buy. Investor Amp focuses on something more valuable: understanding the psychological and behavioral patterns that determine whether a technically correct investment decision ever survives contact with real-world conditions.
The problem we're solving
The gap between knowing what to do and being able to do it under pressure is where most investment returns disappear. An investor can understand the theory of long-term compounding while simultaneously panic-selling during a correction. They can articulate the dangers of confirmation bias while curating a portfolio of only bullish perspectives on their existing holdings.
Understanding this gap — specifically, where it shows up in your own behavior — is the starting point for closing it.
The framework
Investor Amp maps 8 core dimensions of investment decision-making using 40 situational judgment questions calibrated to real investor behavior patterns. Rather than assessing investment knowledge, we assess decision-making architecture: how you actually process information, manage uncertainty, respond to social pressure, and behave under volatility.
The result is a behavioral profile that identifies both your compounding strengths and your highest-risk failure modes — including the compound interactions between dimensions that create the patterns of portfolio destruction most investors never trace back to their source.
The 8 Dimensions
Epistemic Rigour · Hypotheses Synthesis · Calibration of Scope · Ideological Autonomy · Temporal Anchoring · Volatility Insulation · Kinetic Restraint · Systemic Rigidity
Each dimension is independently scored and then cross-referenced to generate compound profiles — both the combinations that create durable edge and the combinations that generate the most common forms of permanent capital loss.
Who it's for
Investor Amp is designed for self-directed investors who take their decision-making seriously. It is not a financial product, does not provide investment advice, and does not collect or store personal information. It is a diagnostic tool — the psychological equivalent of reviewing your trade journal, but built to surface patterns you wouldn't see by looking at your own records.