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Learning Methodology

How SuperLogix organizes financial education content into a coherent, progressive learning experience that works for people without a background in economics.

Structure built around real situations

Most financial education content is organized around academic categories: macroeconomics, microeconomics, investment theory. That structure makes sense in a university setting. It does not make sense for a parent trying to figure out whether to pay off a debt or save for school fees.

SuperLogix organizes content around situations. Each module begins with a scenario that a real person might face, then builds the conceptual understanding needed to navigate that scenario. The theory follows from the practical need, not the other way around.

Each module is self-contained. You do not need to complete earlier modules to understand a later one. Start where your current need is most pressing.

Course Modules

What the content covers

Each module addresses a distinct area of financial understanding. They can be approached in any order depending on your current priorities.

01

Personal Budget Fundamentals

The starting point for anyone who wants to understand where their money goes. This module introduces the concept of a personal budget not as a restriction but as a tool for visibility. You learn to distinguish between income sources, categorize spending, and identify the gap between what you earn and what you spend. No spreadsheets required. Methods are designed to work with paper and pen if needed.

Income tracking Expense categories Fixed vs. variable costs Monthly balance Savings foundations
Notebook with personal budget planning
02

Household Expense Management

The household is the primary financial unit for most families in Mexico. This module focuses on understanding the structure of household spending: which costs are fixed and unavoidable, which are variable and negotiable, and which tend to grow unnoticed over time. It also addresses how to plan for irregular but predictable expenses, such as school enrollment fees, annual insurance payments, or seasonal utility spikes.

Rent and utilities Food and transport Irregular expenses Spending leaks
Family managing household expenses
03

Credit, Debt, and Interest

Credit is one of the most misunderstood financial tools. This module explains how interest works, what the difference is between simple and compound interest, how minimum payments function on credit cards, and when debt becomes a burden rather than a tool. The goal is not to discourage credit use but to ensure that when you use it, you understand what you are agreeing to.

How interest works Credit card mechanics Minimum payments Debt management basics CAT explained
Understanding credit and debt concepts
04

The Mexican Financial System

Mexico has a specific set of financial institutions, regulatory bodies, and consumer protection frameworks. This module explains what Banxico does and why interest rates affect your daily costs, how the CNBV regulates financial institutions and what protections it offers consumers, and what CONDUSEF does when you have a dispute with a financial institution. Understanding the system helps you navigate it.

Banxico and interest rates CNBV role CONDUSEF Consumer rights Inflation basics
Mexican financial system overview

How each module is structured

Every module follows the same internal structure. It opens with a scenario, a real situation that someone might face. Then it introduces the concepts needed to understand that situation. Then it explains how those concepts connect to the broader financial system. Finally, it offers a practical framework or exercise that you can apply immediately.

Terminology is always explained

When a technical term appears, it is defined in plain language at the point of first use. We do not assume familiarity with financial vocabulary. CAT, CETES, AFORE, ISR, IMSS, INFONAVIT. Each of these is explained when it appears, with a practical example of how it affects you.

No prerequisites between modules

While the modules follow a logical sequence, none of them requires you to have completed a previous one. If your most pressing question is about your AFORE, you can go directly to that module. If you want to understand your payslip, start there. The platform is designed to meet you where you are.

Content designed specifically for formal workers

If you receive a payslip, there is a dedicated section of the platform that addresses the specific financial concepts relevant to formal employment in Mexico.

For Formal Workers