Assess what is actually realistic
Turn GPA, scores, activities, and intended major into explainable recommendations instead of vague guesswork.
OneClick helps students assess fit, compare options, and move through applications with more clarity and less repetition.
Begin Free AssessmentU.S. colleges in the library
to complete the first assessment
less repetitive form filling
from profile to submission flow
Product Flow
Turn GPA, scores, activities, and intended major into explainable recommendations instead of vague guesswork.
Run what-if scenarios, compare tradeoffs, and understand which improvements meaningfully change your odds.
Sync profile data into application workflows, reduce manual repetition, and keep key review points visible.
Workflow
The application process is still demanding. The goal here is not to make it feel trivial, but to make every next step clearer, more reviewable, and less repetitive.
Assess your profile and understand where your current application stands.
Build a school list with match, reach, and safety logic you can actually inspect.
Simulate score, activity, and major changes before spending time in the wrong place.
Auto-fill application details and review critical checkpoints before submission.
OneClick keeps the important human judgment in the loop while taking repetitive work out of the way. That balance matters when families need both speed and confidence.
Recommendations are paired with rationale so students and families can review the logic together.
A clearer workflow helps keep essays, documents, and school-specific requirements from slipping through.
The same profile powers recommendations, comparison, and application prep across the full process.
Student Signals
“OneClick compressed my workflow and made my reach-school strategy much clearer when every decision felt noisy.”
“The recommendations were useful because they explained the why, not just the list. That changed how I prioritized.”
“Auto-fill removed a huge amount of repetitive work, and I could stay focused on the parts that actually needed judgment.”