TechnoTutor Exposed

I wrote this for anyone who is considering purchasing TechnoTutor, joining Self Perfected, or anyone involved with Self Perfected/TechnoTutor/Desteni who might be questioning if it’s right for them.

TechnoTutor is one of the many rapid serial visual presentation software that helps improve reading speed. Self Perfected is a community that sells TechnoTutor and claims that it will “end child abuse” and “change the system”. 

Refer to the links at the bottom of this article if you would like to see a demo of TechnoTutor and how it works.

TechnoTutor is Overpriced and There Are Free Tools That Serve the Same Purpose

TechnoTutor is a software that uses rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP), which is the flashing of stimuli at a high speed. In TechnoTutor, a word, letter, or phrase is presented for less than 500ms. TechnoTutor supposedly contains all of the words from the Oxford dictionary. They claim that it subliminally integrates the words into your subconscious and “opens your natural learning ability”, improves comprehension, and increases reading speed, enabling users to learn faster.

TechnoTutor operates on a structured system of word lists, categorized into different levels. As you progress through each level, you’ll be flashed with every word within the list. This process includes vocalizing the word, writing it down, typing it out, and finally reading its definition sourced from the Oxford dictionary. The Self Perfected members and TechnoTutor cofounders claim that by using TechnoTutor daily, we are “purifying words”, “reprogramming the subconscious mind”, and “integrating the words into our subconscious”.

Whether TechnoTutor is effective or not, TechnoTutor charges their customers over $7,000 for functionality that already exists for free, and it is in no way an original idea. Tools like Accelareader, Spreeder, Brillkids, and Swift Read possess the same functionality.

Instead of paying $7,000, individuals can simply use Brillkids, Accelareader, or Spreeder for free, google the Oxford definition of the words they’re flashing if they desire, then use the notes app on their laptop to write the words/phrases back. TechnoTutor can easily be replicated by asking ChatGPT. My gut tells me it’s not best to charge people who are already financially struggling, a high price for a free and unoriginal idea.

According to one TechnoTutor’s leading distributors, TechnoTutor provides the same value as a Tachistoscope, which can be bought on Ebay for $500-$700. To his point, TechnoTutor is overpriced.

Personally, I have experienced no results from using TechnoTutor daily.


Free/Affordable Online Tools that Have Similar Functionality as TechnoTutor:

False Advertising

Self Perfected uses false advertising tactics to convince their members into buying tickets to their events. They charge a high amount for the ticket to attend, then use deceptive sales tactics on the zoom calls (Self Perfected hosts weekly zoom calls on Fridays, and various other zoom meetings if you purchase TechnoTutor), claiming that the tickets are selling out fast or almost sold out, and that you should buy immediately when they are in fact not close to being sold out. I was informed of this by members that are close with the distributors that run the zoom calls and have witnessed it personally.

Misrepresenting the availability of a product in order to create a sense of urgency and pressure consumers into making a purchase is a form of deceptive marketing. I witnessed this last year when they were promoting the San Diego event on a their Friday zoom. The facilitator on the Friday zoom call claimed that the tickets were “selling out fast” and won’t be for sale much longer, and unfortunatley, I purchased the ticket out of pressure, only for them to keep selling tickets for the next couple of months.

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) enforces laws against deceptive advertising under Section 5 of the FTC Act. This law prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce, including false or misleading representations about the availability, characteristics, or benefits of a product. “Unfair methods of competition in or affecting commerce, and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce, are hereby declared unlawful.”

This could also potentially raise legal concerns under various other consumer protection laws and regulations:

So, why is the price for TechnoTutor so high? 

I have witnessed multiple members claim, “The price is high because they get access to the community”. However, the Self Perfected community comes free to those who simply join the Facebook group, local club houses, and/or the Self Perfected zoom calls every Friday. 

My favorite excuse is, “The price is high because they plan to invest the money into buying company shares”. The cofounders of TechnoTutor profited millions since it was founded. I was told on multiple occasions that the profits of TechnoTutor will be used to invest into “changing the system” and that is why the price of TechnoTutor and its various levels are so expensive. They continually raise the price for TechnoTutor and their licenses without having a real financial goal/plan to buy out anything, nor do they make any visible improvements to the software itself.

I have asked on multiple occasions, “If the cofounders really want more people to use TechnoTutor, why do they charge so much?”

A member told me, “If people spend that much money on it, then they’ll be more motivated to use the tool, and if it is cheap, no one will want to use it consistently.” Suggesting that charging a higher price for this product to motivate consumers to use it more consistently is considered very deceptive. 

TechnoTutor is Mostly “Effective” for Children 

When you ask for proof that TechnoTutor works, the first thing they will do is bring up the “TT children” and how intelligent they are. These children were raised using TechnoTutor and homeschooled in a stable environment. In my opinion, it wasn’t shocking that these children were more intelligent than your average child when you compare them to today’s children that were raised by the system. I mean no offense to the TT children, but it’s not fair to use them as a sales tactic for being drastically more intelligent than today’s kids that were raised by Ms. Rachel and baby shark.


Are the TT kids actually that smart? 

The reality is, the cofounder’s children, and many of the kids involved with the Self Perfected community were raised with intention and most kids weren’t. The average child gets separated from their parents at a young age, raised in a daycare, then placed into the school system as soon as age 3. The average child is not being raised to become a genius, and we all know that the school system wasn’t designed to make anyone a genius. It is simply unfair to compare the cofounder’s son to today’s children. Yes, he is intelligent. No, I’m not impressed.

On the downside, the parents involved in TechnoTutor raise their children to such isolating extremities that will turn them into socially weird narcissists. 

Having attended a few Self Perfected events, a couple of things stood out to me about the members.

There is no doubt that the TT children are intelligent, and yes, they learned to read at a drastically younger age than most due to using TechnoTutor. However, that does not mean TechnoTutor was the only method that could lead to those results, nor does it justify charging $7,000. Again, there are free reading software programs that can produce the same results as TechnoTutor. Most likely, parents would get the same results using flash cards and showing it to the child. Until someone proves that’s not true, I think my point remains.

Anyone impressed by the children using TechnoTutor simply aren’t asking enough questions, never met a stable child, and/or does not know how to do very basic research. With or without TechnoTutor, kids are sponges and will become proficient at anything the parents guide them to.


Some Members Are Playing a Role, Some Are Under The Placebo Effect

I have witnessed many individuals claim that every good thing that has happened to them since purchasing TechnoTutor, was because of TechnoTutor, and yet every realization they’ve had through using TechnoTutor could be reached through effective writing or by asking themselves the right questions.

I’ve seen individuals buy expensive things to maintain their reputation, purchase Instagram followers, and fake a perfect life on social media and use that to compare to their old lives and say that TechnoTutor changed their lives, while remaining in a financial crisis the entire journey. 

Distributors who were under deep debt and financial pressure, told their leads that TechnoTutor will make them rich, while not being a living example of that.

Instead of training the distributors ethical and effective sales strategies, the cofounder trains the distributors to manipulate. He is creating a team of liars and manipulators. Today, most of these individuals lack the ability to be down to earth and actually question what they are doing.

Terrible Marketing, Outdated Sales Strategy, and Misrepresentation of TechnoTutor

Most successful businesses adjust their sales strategy and marketing based on the market, the type of leads, and many other variables.

TechnoTutor’s marketing and sales strategy hasn’t been changed, despite the many concerns that were raised about it in the past. The logo has always been the same and their social media accounts are never kept up-to-date. It seems like their only sales strategy is to buy a bunch of “technotutor” domains and create several websites promoting TechnoTutor to balance out the negative reddit reviews.

Strangely, members were told not to mention “TechnoTutor” in their online content as if there’s something to hide. To avoid mentioning TechnoTutor or discussing its purpose until you trap them into a 3 hour presentation says a lot about the product AND the individual. It’s like these individuals are doing the exact same things they’re against, deceiving people.

Most individuals won’t sit through a 3-hour presentation. What ends up happening is the presentation would either be broken up into multiple sessions, the leads ghost the distributor and don’t buy, or they endure the presentation and still don’t buy. This is a recurring pattern that isn’t being addressed since they mostly treat sales as a numbers game rather than a strategic plan.

The average attention span is 8 seconds. It is common sense that a 3-hour presentation is not effective if we want TechnoTutor to be used by the majority of the people. If it takes 3 hours to explain the value behind your product, it is probably not so valuable and you should reconsider what you’re selling.

The presentation is clearly targeted towards parents, and yet it’s being presented like it is “best for all”. They have no data to prove that except for the various testimonials from members, and they have no plans to change the presentation despite the high failure rate and no one questions that.

The distributors are not being trained to understand the product and the “research” behind the tool so that they can answer the common skeptical questions that come up. Instead, the cofounders they are training the distributors to gaslight their leads into buying. A common question is, “Are there any studies to back this up?”, and all they say is that there’s hundreds of years of research without giving it to you, mention the TT children, or they share dishonest “miracles” and changes they’ve personally experienced. 

The Sales Presentation is a Misrepresentation of What TechnoTutor Actually Is

Towards the end of the presentation, they will have you take a reading test. They make you read a document about the heart. Then, using what appears to be TechnoTutor, a series of strings are flashed on the screen. These strings had TWO words. One word, and the meaning of the word.

For example:

itis = inflammation

encephalon = brain

You’ll flash these phrases three times then type them back. Naturally, you remember that itis means inflammation and encephalon means brain after typing it, saying it, and spelling it three times.

Then, they ask you what words like encephalitis means. Naturally, you understand that means brain inflammation. For a split second, I actually was impressed by my ability to comprehend these unfamiliar terms. Now, after having used TechnoTutor for a while, I understand that it was a false representation of what TechnoTutor really is. They simply did a memory exercise in the presentation, but TechnoTutor is not at all like that once you start using it.

In the presentation, they flashed BOTH the word and a one-word definition. When you buy TechnoTutor and use it, it flashes one word, and then you have to read the full Oxford definition. You simply can’t remember the definition of every word, and some of them can be incomprehensible depending on your reading level. Just know that how TechnoTutor is used in the presentation, is not how your experience will be when you purchase it.

This is another example of how they use False Advertising.  

Deceiving Claims

“The profits will be used to change the system”

One of the things that attracted me to this community was their passion around changing the system.

I am confident that the cofounders combined have earned millions since the company was founded in 2013. Individuals are investing over $100k+ for a Regional Distributorship, and a small amount is left. Many License Distributorships/Area Distributorships/Regional Distributorships and copies of TechnoTutor were sold between now and 2013. 

Knowing that, what are they waiting for?

To this day, I wonder why was no one has asked themselves:

There are specific individuals in this community who plan to get involved in politics, and actually do great things that can make an impact. I have full respect for the select few members who are actually taking action and living their purpose, but that is a small percentage of individuals and it surely doesn’t have anything to do with TechnoTutor.

One of the cofounders once told a member whom was financially struggling, that they had to buy the ticket for one of the events they were throwing, despite not being able to afford it, because they had to be there and that the impact is worth more. Sadly, that individual left every event as the same person. Only with temporary feelings of positivity and motivation from being around people who love-bomb you.

For example, the 2023 San Diego Event cost around $400 to attend and nearly 200 people showed up. The $400 ticket was to simply be present at the event. It did not cover the hotel fee or any traveling fees. ~$80,000 was earned from that one event alone and they throw at least one per year, and sometimes additional smaller events during the year. I’m sure a nice portion of that money is used to cover the event fees like the various rooms they reserved, catering, etc.

Now they are charging $500 for the Miami trip. If 200 people show up, that’s $100,000 profit, minus the fees for the event.

I simply do not align with how they overcharge and deceive their members by claiming that they are planning to change the system when most clearly don’t have those intentions except maybe a few people who are actually trying to get into politics and it’s not the cofounders.

The reality is, they don’t plan on doing anything more than what they are doing right now. Nothing. Other than teaching you how to manipulate people.

I’m a firm believer that if you’re going to dedicate your life to this community and using TechnoTutor, you should be informed of the cofounders’ true intentions with the profits. Otherwise you’re not much different from an employee, and from what I can see, a full time McDonald’s worker is making more money than some of these distributors.

“TechnoTutor will end child abuse”

The founders of TechnoTutor claim that “TechnoTutor will end child abuse.” If that’s the case, ask yourself:

It’s apparent that the goal was never for a huge amount of people to find out about TechnoTutor. Cults like this only succeed with small amounts of loyal people, but just enough for the people at the top to profit, and gain new members that come from those loyal people, rather than from anyone who could easily challenge them and their business model. More people will realize they are in fact false advertising and are likely to get involved in some serious legal issues if they scale too much.


“TechnoTutor will make you rich”

I’ve heard multiple members/distributors claim that TechnoTutor itself and/or buying a Licensed Distributorship/Area Distributorship/Regional Distributorship can make you “wealthy” and help you build the vocabulary of a wealthy person. Not a single person in this community is who I’d consider financially wealthy other than the co-founders and maybe individuals who bought the $100k+ Regional Distributorship. 

There are members that present themselves as if they are financially wealthy through materialism, but behind the scenes they are in a financial crisis. I would not advise to anyone who is struggling financially to invest in this tool or any of the licenses not only because it’s an overpriced dictionary that you can find online for free, but because nothing is guaranteed in return. Buying TechnoTutor and any of its distributorships is a huge gamble, especially if you don’t have the skills to be a decent salesman.

Anytime I asked questions, I got responses like, “Look at my car”, “Didn’t she see our house?” or “Successful people invest thousands to make the money they do”. 

Wealthy people invest large sums of money into things that are likely to have a high success rate and return value. Let’s measure that for TechnoTutor, shall we? If you are a distributor, take the total # of sales made and divide it by the total # of presentations. That’s your success rate… that should tell you if this is a worthy investment of $7,000+.

I’ve come to find that TechnoTutor alone will not give you the skills of a wealthy person. Wealth is developed through your actions and experience. Which can be driven by — who you surround yourself with, the content you consume, and who you are learning from. Not by self hypnosis, fake-positive thinking and flashing words and reading the definition. When/if you get any results, it will not be overnight or sustainable. I have not seen anyone get consistent results through using TechnoTutor and attending the calls.

The members are great at creating the illusion that anything good happening in their life is due to using TechnoTutor. They often disregard the action it takes to get results in anything and give all of the credit to TechnoTutor. No different from a religious person thanking God for something they did themselves. Completely ignoring the fact that most individuals are under deeper financial pressure than they would have been if they simply read a book and found a mentor.

While I was involved in this community, I’ve noticed that most don’t make a sale more than once every 1–2 months. There are members who haven’t made a single sale in months or at all and still convinced themselves this is “best for all”.

I watched more individuals struggle financially and mentally, more than I have seen anyone in this group become wealthy.

Investigate All Things and Keep What is Good

This community lives by a set of principles originating from Desteni and one of them is to Investigate All Things and Keep What is Good, or I’ve heard it as “Question All Things and Keep What is Best”. What I never understood is why they promote such a principle that gets abandoned immediately when the questions involve them or TechnoTutor. They push back on the only people who are actually trying to investigate things regarding TechnoTutor and the intent of the community. That’s a common brainwashing tactic many cults use.

I’ve been made to feel guilty about my doubts, and that my questions are stemming from my trust issues or something that happened in my childhood. Saying things like, “Well have you put that in TechnoTutor?” “Have you investigated where that question is coming from?” “You need to trust yourself first.” “How can you trust this process when you don’t trust yourself?” “When was the first time you experienced this emotion?” As if any of that is relevant to why I am having these observations. These manipulative tactics began to affect how I normally thought and distracted me from my original observations because it made me feel like there was something wrong with me for having these thoughts.

Being in Self Perfected was one huge, exhausting brain fuck. I overanalyzed certain things about myself that weren’t relevant to the problems I was noticing in the community and I gained a ton of clarity by taking a step back, snapping out of the over-analyzing spell they cast on their members, and looked at this community for what it really is.

Telling your members to flash “I understand TT” when you experience doubt, instead of answering their questions, was a huge red flag to me and I’m very disappointed that I allowed someone to instill these thoughts in my head. I am grateful that nothing could brainwash me to ignore the obvious truth, even when I tried to, just so that I felt like I could fit into this community and keep my relationship.

They’ve mastered the ability to use your past or certain personality traits against you when the time is right. And they’ve glorified and redefined the concept of a cult to make you feel okay with being in what is clearly a cult. They say “everything's a cult” like a church or a group of people with similar beliefs, but forgetting the main difference which is that:

I even heard the cofounder speaking on a zoom call complaining about people who doubted the tool and said “If you’re not seeing results and you don’t think it works, then leave”.

I advise to anyone who wants to use this tool (or any tool) for the rest of their lives, and encourage their kids to use it daily, then you are responsible for asking about know the why’s and the how’s. One should never take things at face value. Just because there are testimonials and YouTube reviews (made by the distributors), doesn’t make it a success for everyone, and I simply will not make my future children use something just because of the results other people got. 

If the co-founders and distributors had honest intentions, they’d have no problem sharing the “hundreds of years of research” behind the tool since it’s not secret information, and anyone with half of a brain would ask to see it.

The reality is, skeptics who question things often can’t be manipulated or molded to be loyal agents for these communities, hence why they never last in cult-like groups. The government treats conspiracy theorists the same way Self Perfected treats their skeptics. Let that sink in.

Instead of admitting they only want moldable people in their community, they say that you must be “teachable”. By teachable, they present it as if they mean someone who’s willing to learn. But that’s not really what they mean, or else I would have fit in the group perfectly. I probably asked the most questions than anyone there. By being teachable, they are referring to someone gullible enough to regularly use TechnoTutor without question, sell it, then buy a license. Teachability is measured by whether you believe in their teachings and their teachings only.

Unfortunately, both TechnoTutor and these licenses (LD, AD, and RD) are being presented to people with a lower vocabulary and ones who don’t have the skillset to become wealthy or question their intentions. This is not a jab at those people, but at the corruption of the clear intent of the folks “at the top” of this pyramid scheme.

If the distributors were trained to understand the “research” behind TechnoTutor, then they can better answer the questions they’re hit with by leads, especially the smarter leads who ask legitimate questions about the studies/research behind TechnoTutor. For example, I observed that these distributors can only sell TechnoTutor to individuals up to a similar IQ/vocabulary. I witnessed a distributor gaslight someone for asking a legitimate question. For example, someone asked, “How is this going to make me rich and successful when no one in this group is rich except the cofounders?” And he responded, “Dude, have you seen my car?” (The car he couldn’t afford). Obviously he didn’t make the sale because this person had common sense, and gaslighting is a complete turn off to anyone smart. Overall, I’ve noticed this recurring pattern where folks start to question things, and the members/distributors don’t respond well. And instead of being trained on how to respond in an ethical, honest way with facts, they’re trained to play mind games with their leads, and guilt-trip them into buying. They seem to be caught under a spell, and no longer possess the ability to empathize.

Throughout all this time, I just kept wondering different variations of the same questions:

And after having all of these questions for a year straight, and flashing them in TechnoTutor, my common sense kicked in.

Anyone Can Become a Distributor

Reminder, this community claims that they want to change the system by selling TechnoTutor, and yet, anyone can sell TechnoTutor regardless of their intentions and their knowledge set. Meaning, anyone can simply buy an entire area/region for the sole purpose of making money, and write a convincing letter. That made it clear to me that they are not as serious about their mission as I thought they were. There's a limited number of licenses and I would assume, if they gave a fuck, they wouldn’t just sell to anyone who writes a convincing letter. Actions speak louder than words and to me, this makes it clear that they only care about money. There are plenty of people who bought a license who are no longer affiliated with the group. They don’t seem to distribute the licenses wisely, in a way that ensures TechnoTutor is spreaded properly.


In a hypothetical world, let's say that the real purpose of TechnoTutor is to end child abuse and save lives.  If someone who’s ignorant sells it (can’t answer questions about the tool, has poor sales skills, etc), they could be spreading the wrong information about it, not helping Self Perfected reach this overall goal, or lead to more sales. 


It’s clear to me that they are willing to sell these things to anyone, and that it’s easier to sell this to someone who’s ignorant than someone who isn’t. And that is why the co-founders are okay with having distributors who aren’t fully educated about how the product works, or how to be decent salesmen. 


At the end of the day, this is a numbers game. 100 mediocre salesmen can still sell X amount of TechnoTutor copies per week to more ignoramuses, and the cofounders will still make a lot of money. While the individual distributors who are only making a sale here and there will remain stuck at their full time jobs or in a financial crisis, paying back the license they bought. This sounds familiar, doesn’t it?

If TechnoTutor Could Actually Change Anything, It Wouldn’t Be Accessible

TechnoTutor alone won’t change the system. This has been proven because there are already several tools that exist today that are more popular than TechnoTutor that possess the exact same functionality/purpose, and nothing has changed. 

If TechnoTutor had the slightest ounce of potential to change the system, the elite would shut this tool down, and the various other rapid serial visual presentation products. 

One of the cofounders and I were discussing how corrupt the elite are. He said something that stood out to me — when you start making up to a certain amount of money, someones gonna come knocking on your door and asking you to do some dark shit to keep your success… There’s always a glass ceiling to how much an average person can make, and yet they’re telling their members that they can become billionaires with TechnoTutor while completely disregarding: 1) What they know about the elite and how they operate. 2) No one in this group is a billionaire. This group is pure hypocrisy.

Self Perfected is doing the same thing the elite is doing to us, at a minor scale and convincing you they are doing what is best. As if they are in any position to dictate what is best.

The 80/20 Rule: The Ultimate Hook

Self Perfected hosts local clubhouses every 2 weeks in many areas, and weekly zoom calls on Fridays. The information they share can be helpful depending on your current circumstances. Any new-comers usually have a good first impression because TechnoTutor isn’t the main topic. Instead the topics cover things that most of us would resonate with. Self Perfected implements what I call the 80/20 rule to attract and keep their leads.

The 80/20 rule is the idea that one can be easily persuaded with 80% truth, and 20% lie. They share a lot of truth in their zoom calls that most couldn’t deny, and they have to do that or they couldn’t maintain our loyalty. For example, they discuss topics about how corrupted the system is, while hiding their real intent through deceiving sales tactics and various brainwashing techniques (this would be the 20% lie that goes unnoticed).

Just because they share valuable information in no way proves that they are trying to change the system or good people. They’re simply smart and understand that you have to provide some value for any of this to be possible, and that by hosting these calls every week, and some events here and there, it will not only keep certain people loyal to the community, but attract more leads, make them more money, while the attendees don’t earn a dime.

There are zoom calls that are only for people who purchased TT or a certain license (LD, AD, or RD), and they tell you that if you buy the next thing, you get more support. It feels more exclusive even though the information isn’t drastically more helpful. 

I do want to highlight that I agree with the majority of the information Self Perfected shares on the zoom calls, and I also align with their values. Just like any group, they need to share some truth to keep the attention of its members, otherwise people will immediately see through the bullshit. I also see the value in being a part of a community, but not a community that is solely intended to sell a service. That’s when it feels less like a community and more like a pyramid scheme that is primarily feeding off of less fortunate individuals. 

Breakthroughs & Playing Cupid

Regardless of how many people convince themselves the Self Perfected events are “life-changing”, most attendees go back to their old ways, despite the many “breakthroughs” that happen. One of the main selling-points for going to these events is the breakthroughs you experience, which is generally a sudden advance or discovery about yourself. During these events, they ask pretty invasive questions about your past and childhood that would press anyone’s buttons and cause a breakthrough. Again, not impressed. I’ve been an open book my whole life, and have always been pretty self aware for the most part so I did not experience anything life-changing.

This is the perfect opportunity for them to learn about your past/childhood so that they can use it against you later. Be careful what you tell any of the members. 

Some people might find a significant other at these events, but this happens due to the amount of pressure they put behind relationships in this community. If you are single and attend one of the Self Perfected events, they will pubically make it known that you are single so that you find a match, play cupid and connect you with someone, with hopes you both date and eventually marry into the community and stay stuck there. These things generally happen very quickly, where you cannot take time to process what’s going on and that is why a lot of individuals end up stuck. After researching cults, I find that this is a common rule — you must only date individuals from the group, and marrying can almost permanently eliminate any possibility of you leaving.

Writing is Just as Effective

Members might say, “Well I experienced X in my life when I started using TechnoTutor.” or, “I met the love of my life”, and have all these different results they think they’ve gotten. When you understand the value of writing, self reflection, and taking action in general, you can’t be easily convinced that TechnoTutor is the reason you overcame challenges in your life. It’s called Self Responsibility, and that’s what brings growth and change in your life. Whether or not you pull out your laptop everyday and use TechnoTutor is irrelevant because without action, success can’t and won’t be reached. Most, if not, all billionaires/millionaires did not use TechnoTutor to get to where they are, and nobody in this community, other than the cofounders, are millionaires. 

Writing and reading in general is an effective way to grow internally, and this tool allows you to do both of those things. However, when I write my thoughts into a journal, I feel more stable and equipped to take on my goals. TechnoTutor is used in the same way, where you can put all of your positive/negative thoughts into a custom list and flash it to stabilize yourself, it’s simply a different approach to writing.

“We are the research” says the cofounder as he withholds the “hundreds of years of research”. 

To claim that TechnoTutor is backed on hundreds of years of research, and withhold that research, is a false claim until proven true. The co-founders won’t share the research they claim is behind TechnoTutor. They won’t share the one thing that would help clear up the doubt and confusion in a lot of people probably because they don’t have it, or because it disproves their own claims. There is research to prove that flashing things improves memory and reading speed, but a lot of these studies were regarding child learning. Self Perfected promotes TechnoTutor like it is more powerful than what it actually is. I can flash “I think like a billionaire” in TechnoTutor and nothing will change until I learn from an actual billionaire.

The cofounder responded, “We are the research” at an event when talking about people who were asking about the research behind TechnoTutor. To me, it sounded very experimental. No one pays $7,000 to be a part of an experiment or research. If we’re the research then he should be paying us to use his product. 

You cannot charge people for something with no proven value. Again, it’s illegal. When I recognized that, I understood why they don’t want people to mention TechnoTutor in videos or for people to find out about this at a higher scale.

Self Perfected Slang and the Manipulative Usage of Words

Cults commonly have their own words that they redefine for their purposes. 


One should always believe actions over words. If you find that this community continually does the following:


Then their intentions do not stem from honesty.


If you would like to continue your research, I highly recommend you check out these resources:


TechnoTutor Demo

Watch parts 1–3 if you would like to see the entirety of the TechnoTutor software and how it works.

Part 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=76mYrGjrt4k&t=10s

Part 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIFwQxdQCRY&t=746s

Part 3: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6QJGY0N4mCU


Leaving Desteni

https://leavingdesteni.wordpress.com/

https://leavingdesteni.wordpress.com/2023/08/27/former-technotutor-distributors-statements-of-facts-affidavits-2010-2015/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUHV7ul595E

Cults and Brainwashing Techniques

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=049QjofvBu8

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHrn0anM9VE&t=741s

These reddit threads should be read thoroughly, I deeply regret ignoring them

https://www.reddit.com/r/antiMLM/comments/t7sn5l/techno_tutor_a_coercive_and_deceitful_scheme/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf

https://www.reddit.com/r/antiMLM/comments/kcsdfg/technotutor/

Free/Affordable Tools that Have Similar Functionality as TechnoTutor

https://accelareader.com/

https://www.brillkids.com/teach-reading/

https://www.brillkids.com/pop-up/videos/product-lr-quick-tour-youtube.php

https://swiftread.com/

https://www.spreeder.com/