Gear Selection Lesson — Equipment Decision Page
An equipment-selection lesson with comparison cards, weight or cost charts, and a decision framework that helps students choose the right tool for the job — pilots outdoor gear but the pattern fits any 'pick the right equipment' lesson.
Best for: Equipment- or tool-selection lessons where students must compare options and pick the right one for their use case.
Live preview — scroll inside the frame to see the full page.
What it does
- Use-case framing block — opens by asking the student to name what they actually need to do, before any gear is shown
- Comparison card row — three to six gear options laid out side by side with key specs, pros, and cons
- Weight, cost, and capability chart — a small visual comparing the options on the dimensions that matter most
- Decision-framework block — a short ranking exercise that turns the student's priorities into a recommended pick
- 'For most people' callout — a clear default recommendation for students who don't want to overthink it
- Where-to-source guide — a closing card with where to buy, rent, borrow, or upgrade the gear over time
Best use cases
- Outdoor and adventure education — backpacks, tents, footwear, navigation gear
- Photography and creative arts — cameras, lenses, lighting, mics, and editing tools
- Music and performance — instruments, amps, mics, and recording gear
- Business and tech — software comparisons, tool stacks, and platform decisions
- Cooking, fitness, and craft — kitchen equipment, training gear, and craft tools
What you can change with your DNA
When you run this through the remix skill, your CCOS DNA — brand, voice, audience — drives these decisions automatically:
- Colors — slots for page background, comparison-card surfaces, chart colors (one per option), decision-framework tint, and the where-to-source close
- Fonts — a confident display font for the gear names and chart labels and a clean body font for the comparison cards and decision text
- Copy — use-case framing, three to six comparison-card descriptions and specs, chart labels, decision-framework prompts, default recommendation, and where-to-source guidance
- Images — gear photos in the comparison cards, supporting visuals in the use-case framing, and small icons for chart dimensions
- Behavior — toggle whether students can sort or filter the comparison cards, whether the decision framework auto-recommends an option, and whether the page exports as a buying guide
How remixing works
From "swiped it" to "shipped it" in three steps.
Pick a remix
Browse the library, find one that fits — like this one.
Run it through your DNA
The remix skill uses your CCOS DNA to swap colors, fonts, copy, and structure so it lands as yours.
Ship it
Paste the finished HTML into Thinkific, Kajabi, WordPress, or any platform that takes embed code.
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