
Steering
Students career design, family-centric and evidence-driven
3 followers
Students career design, family-centric and evidence-driven
3 followers
A holistic self-discovery for the students and their families, for their life dreams and aspirations, for a family-centric career design and college selection. You get decision models, domain-centric thoughts-map, industry references, and quarterly check-ins.










Hey, Product Hunt. 🙏🏼. I am Vinish Garg, the founder designer of Steering—a career design as life design experience for high school students and their families.
Steering is based on domain-centric intelligent models where we build and support the decision models and discussion support systems for the families, building convergence and a shared understanding of the students' career path.
While most of the traditional career support tools say—"Based on Divyam's personality and goals, he should study engineering"; Steering says—"Divyam's family discovers how to turn potential conflict and uncertainty (tradition vs. innovation) into collaborative advantage (modernizing family expertise) for a rewarding career direction experience."
Steering builds their own capacity and intelligence to make career decisions, collectively. They get a comprehensive analysis that includes:
— Decision models and discussion support systems
— Thoughts-map to connect their thoughts
— A vibes quadrant that visually tells them where they are and where they want to be
— Industry references for employment, trends, experts' interviews, and insights
— LinkedIn references to people who have following the same or similar career path
— How Steering prepared that analysis—visuals from our domain models, theme clustering, and confidence-designing work
— Quarterly check-in to support them if they need directions for anything
— Actionable plan for the first year, or the integrated five years program
— And more
* Economic: When families make sovereign decisions, they create new markets and opportunities rather than just competing for existing ones.
* Social: Strong family decision-making creates stable communities and reduces anxiety-driven competition.