Kiweto is a short online course that replaces financial overwhelm with a simple weekly rhythm. No spreadsheets. No jargon. Just clear thinking about where your money goes.
You open a budgeting app and immediately face twelve categories, synced bank accounts, and color-coded graphs. Ten minutes in, you close it. The intention was real. The friction was just too high.
Kiweto takes a different approach. The course focuses on building four consistent weekly habits that take roughly fifteen minutes combined. Over time, those habits accumulate into genuine financial awareness without the cognitive load of traditional budgeting tools.
Read the story behind Kiweto
Each module introduces one concept and one habit. Nothing builds on complexity. Everything builds on clarity.
A ten-minute ritual that anchors your financial awareness to a single point in the week. No daily tracking. No constant monitoring. One moment of clarity that carries forward.
A simple method for categorizing where money actually went during the week. No apps required. The habit uses paper, a pen, and four broad categories that cover most spending patterns.
Understanding what is coming in the next seven days before it arrives. Bills, irregular costs, planned purchases. A brief forward scan that removes financial surprises from daily life.
Closing the weekly ritual by naming one financial intention for the coming week. Not a goal with a number attached. A direction. A conscious choice about where attention and energy will go.
Drag or use the arrows to explore what consistent weekly habits build toward.
After two weeks of the weekly check-in habit, most people notice spending patterns they had no idea existed. Visibility precedes change. The habit creates the visibility.
The unknown creates more stress than the known. When you check in with your money regularly, even difficult financial realities feel more manageable because they are no longer vague threats.
Complex systems require willpower to maintain. Simple habits slot into existing routines. The course is designed to be the kind of practice you actually keep doing after the four weeks are done.
When you know what you have and where it tends to go, spending decisions become choices rather than reactions. The weekly intention-setting habit is specifically designed to strengthen this muscle.
The habits taught in Kiweto are a starting point, not a ceiling. Once the weekly rhythm is established, adding more nuance, saving targets, or longer-term planning becomes far more natural.
Each of the four modules is delivered as a focused video lesson, accompanied by a one-page worksheet. The lessons are short by design. The worksheets are intentionally simple. Everything fits into the margins of an ordinary week.
There is no community forum to keep up with, no homework to submit, and no grade at the end. The course is a set of tools and a framework. What you build with them is your own.