Find a path.Then compare it.
ClarUP starts with a lean starter profile, sharpens direction with assessments, helps you compare career matches, and lets you test the fit in simulations before you commit to a roadmap.
The homepage should promisea cleaner sequence, not more noise.
ClarUP works best when the public site explains the flow clearly: starter context first, stronger evidence second, pressure-testing third, and roadmaps only after a direction starts to hold.
starter signals before signup
portal loop after signup
resume walls on step one
The first promise should feel light
Users should understand the value quickly: they answer a few real questions, get a direction, and only then decide whether to deepen the profile.
Start with just enough signal
ClarUP begins with eight high-signal questions so users see value before they are asked for full profile depth.
Sharpen the shortlist with better evidence
Assessments and profile detail are used after the first signal appears, not as the cost of entry.
Pressure-test before planning
Simulations help users judge fit under pressure. Roadmaps come later, when a direction has actually earned commitment.
Inside the portal
One connected operating loop after signup.
The public site should not simulate depth. It should hand users into a system that can actually discover, compare, simulate, and plan in order.
Profile refinement on demand
Users add more history only when better recommendations justify it.
Career comparison with context
Matches are meant to be compared, challenged, and narrowed before anyone commits.
One portal loop
Discover, compare, simulate, and roadmap all sit in one connected workflow.
A stronger decision path inthree deliberate moves
The order matters. Users should see a direction early, improve it with evidence, and only then invest in planning.
Answer the starter questions
Capture the strongest context first: current stage, background, experience, and a few starter skills.
Improve the shortlist inside the portal
Assessments and optional profile refinement sharpen the match set only after the first direction appears.
Simulate the fit before you plan
Users pressure-test promising directions first, then open a roadmap around the path that survives that pressure.
What this sequence protects
It keeps the first promise light, while the later promise gets smarter.
Users do not have to commit to a heavy profile just to see whether ClarUP can help. But once they continue, the system gets progressively more useful instead of repeating the same shallow quiz.
Public pages should clarify the system.The portal should do the heavy lifting.
The homepage should set expectations cleanly. It should not imitate a full career platform on the public surface. The real product value starts once the user crosses into Discover.
Starter flow stays intentionally lean
The first experience asks only for inputs that materially improve the first shortlist.
Profile detail has a clear job
Experience, education, and deeper signals belong inside the portal where they actually improve recommendations.
Private by default
Career discovery should feel like guided thinking, not public performance or profile theater.
Phase 1
Public pages
Explain the product, the promise, and the path.
Phase 2
Discover
Turn starter signal into comparisons, assessments, and pressure tests.
Phase 3
Roadmap
Open only after a direction has real support behind it.
Where the real value starts
Discover is where ClarUP turns from messaging into machinery.
That is why the public landing page should stay intentional. It needs to set the frame, create trust, and move users cleanly into the portal loop that can actually assess, compare, simulate, and plan.
Complete Career DNA assessments when you want sharper signal.
Compare better career matches instead of browsing disconnected content.
Use simulations to test fit before you commit more effort.
Open a roadmap around the direction you actually trust.
Start with a few honest signals.Earn the roadmap after that.
ClarUP works best when the sequence stays clean: answer the core questions, improve the signal, compare the options, test the fit, and then plan with confidence.
Quick starter flow
Begin with eight high-signal questions, not a heavy profile form.
Simulations before roadmaps
The product pushes users to test fit before they invest in planning.
No card for the first step
The first action is low-friction so users can decide if the system helps.
The first step should feel easy to start, easy to trust, and easy to continue from.