
Want to do Major Breakthrough? Here’s how to loop your parents in.
First of all: good for you.
Seriously. The fact that you’re interested in something that helps you get clarity on your future already says something important about who you are.
If you’re reading this page, it probably means:
You’re curious about doing Major Breakthrough.
You think it might actually help.
You’re just not sure how to explain that to your parents.
Totally normal. That’s what this page is for.
What you can say (or copy & paste) to them:
Hey, I found something called Major Breakthrough. It’s a guided experience that helps students figure out what kind of work they’re made for—and what majors or career paths might actually fit.
It’s not a test or a quiz—it’s a process that helps you figure out your design, your strengths, and how that connects to real decisions.
It’s made by people who really get how overwhelming this can be—and it sounds like something that would really help me get clarity.
What parents usually want to know:
Them: “What is this exactly?”
You: “It’s a 6-session process that helps students figure out their best-fit majors, careers, and next steps—based on who they are uniquely designed to be.”
Them: “Is this just another personality test?”
You: “Nope. It’s way more reflective and personalized. You actually get a Best Work Statement and AI-assisted Career Matches at the end, and it’s guided by a real person.”
Them: “Do other parents really go for this?”
You: “Yeah—there’s even a part of the site just for parents. It’s designed to help families make these decisions with less stress, not more.”
Them: “How much does it cost?”
You: “Well, there’s a free intro video we can watch together. I think it would answer that questions and some of the others you have too.”
Want to loop them in? Here’s how.
Send them to the page we’ve made just for them: Vocationality.com/parents.
That page includes an introduction to Major Breakthrough that’s designed just for them. They’ll even see their own free starting point video, their own FAQs, and so on.
A final note:
You’re not being pushy. You’re being thoughtful.
If this feels like something that would help you feel more confident, more focused, or just less anxious about the future—it’s 100% OK to ask for help.
You’re not asking them to figure it out for you.
You’re asking for support while you figure it out for yourself.