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Next batch starts 20 Jul
ChessWize student lifting a trophy after a Rotary tournament win
SUCCESS STORIES

Real students, real progress,
real tournament wins.

Documented outcomes from ChessWize coach records. No fake testimonials. No stock photos. Where the source names a child, quote, or trophy — we show it.

See documented outcomes
1,200+ demos·1000+ students
How we report success

The proof on this page is sourced from real coach records, not invented “before and after” marketing copy.

ChessWize publishes only a small set of named student stories, so this page stays honest about what is documented. Where the source names a child, quote, or competitive outcome, we show it. Where the source only supports an aggregate pattern, we keep it aggregate and leave missing specifics visibly marked.

Parents in their own words

Parent feedback tied to specific coaches and real cities.

These are the three parent quotes currently published in ChessWize coach profiles. No extra reviews are added here beyond what already exists in source content.

Anjali R.

Bengaluru

Hrdyansh sir is patient with my 7-year-old. The weekly WhatsApp report tells me exactly what they covered — I never have to chase him.
Coach: Hrdyansh Pandey

Suresh K.

Pune

Tarun sir doesn't just teach openings. He teaches how to plan three moves ahead — that's the skill my daughter is using in school maths now.
Coach: Tarun Gupta

Mitali D.

Kolkata

Aryan sir taught my son in Bengali — that was the difference. He understood the concepts immediately and now plays in English with confidence.
Coach: Aryan Pal
By the numbers

A compact credibility row grounded in published coach data.

1,200+

demos conducted

Hrdyansh's documented teaching experience and awards

75–80%

conversion to programme

Hrdyansh's documented demo-to-programme conversion rate

1000+

students globally

Hrdyansh's documented students trained total

10+ countries

served across core geographies

Documented coverage includes India, USA, UK, Singapore, Australia, UAE, and the Middle East

How we measure progress

The reporting loop is part of the product, not an afterthought.

01

Initial level diagnosis during the demo

The first live session is not a generic sales call. ChessWize coaches use it to spot current level, comfort with notation, tactical awareness, and whether the child belongs in foundation, intermediate, or tournament-prep work.

02

Weekly WhatsApp parent report

Hrdyansh and Aryan both document weekly WhatsApp summaries as part of the coaching system. Parents are told exactly what was covered, what improved, and what the next session will focus on.

03

Monthly progression score against the curriculum

The academy describes stage-based benchmarks for tactics, opening confidence, and competitive readiness. That means monthly reviews are tied to the curriculum rather than vague “doing well” feedback.

04

AICF / FIDE tournament performance when applicable

For students who enter rated events, progress is tracked against official tournament results and performance, not just puzzle scores. Families can read more about how competitive chess for kids works in practical terms. FIDE rating

Why this measurement loop matters to parents

Many online academies promise improvement but never define what improvement means. ChessWize's published coach notes describe a different operating rhythm: the demo diagnoses level, the coach maps the child to a stage, the family receives weekly written reporting, and tournament-ready students are reviewed against external competition outcomes when available. That creates a feedback loop parents can follow without needing to “just trust the coach” for six months.

Typical progression timeline

What students typically achieve when they stay long enough for the curriculum to compound.

These are pattern-level descriptions assembled from documented coaching stages and published coach outcomes. They are not presented as promises to every family, but as the clearest public map of how ChessWize defines progress over time.

6 months

From first moves to school-club confidence

Aryan's profile documents 50+ children moving from 'has never moved a piece' to 'plays at school chess club' in under 6 months. That is the clearest beginner benchmark currently published in ChessWize source data.

12 months

From foundation to intermediate discipline

By the one-year mark, the documented curriculum suggests a shift from piece coordination and basic tactics into opening principles, middlegame planning, and stronger tactical pattern recognition. This is a typical programme milestone, not a claim about one named child.

24 months

From intermediate work to rated-event readiness

Tarun's profile documents senior-cohort students progressing from beginner to FIDE-rated within 18–24 months. For families pursuing tournament play, that is the clearest published reference point for the transition from structured training to official tournament outcomes.

The useful takeaway for parents is not that every child will follow the same timetable, but that the academy has publicly defined what each stage looks like. Beginners are expected to gain rule fluency, tactical recognition, and enough confidence to play in school environments. Competitive students are expected to build repertoire discipline, game-analysis habits, and eventually the resilience required for AICF and FIDE-rated events. That kind of staged language is more credible than generic claims about “becoming a champion fast.”

Why this page reads differently

We would rather ship fewer proof points than invent a stronger story.

Most academy “results” pages blur together because they rely on vague claims, unverified ratings, and anonymous superlatives. This page is intentionally stricter: documented student outcomes, named parent quotes already present in coach files, and visible placeholders anywhere the published source still lacks a number the team may later want to share.

What happens next for a new family

  • 1. Book a complimentary demo so the coach can diagnose current level live.
  • 2. Get placed into the right track instead of a generic “all levels” batch.
  • 3. Receive weekly parent reporting and curriculum-linked progress updates.
  • 4. Move toward school events, AICF competition, or FIDE-rated play when appropriate.
STILL HAVE QUESTIONS?

Your child's next great move starts with a 30-minute discussion call.

Book a complimentary discussion call or message our team on WhatsApp — we reply in under 10 minutes.

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1,500+

Parents Trust Us

1000+

Students Coached

4.9 ★

From 320+ Verified Parents