A fingerprint analysis is not guesswork. Here is what happens from the moment you book, and why the technology behind it is unlike anything else available in Singapore.
The science behind this practice is called dermatoglyphics — the study of the ridge patterns on the fingertips that form during the third to fifth month of foetal development, at the same time the brain's neural architecture is being established.
The research connecting fingerprint patterns to cognitive and learning preferences has been developed over approximately 20 years, with roots in academic work originating at Harvard University. The analytical software holds a US patent — the only such patent in this field and something no other Singapore provider can claim.
This is not personality typing. It is not an IQ test. It is a tool for understanding how a specific child is wired to absorb information, find motivation, and engage with the world — information that is present in the fingerprints from birth and does not change over time.
See what's included in the report →Before you commit to anything, we have a conversation. This is a genuine no-obligation call — not a sales pitch. You can ask every question you have about how the analysis works, what the report covers, and whether this makes sense for your family right now. There is no pressure to book at the end.
Most parents find they only need one call. Some come back a second time with a partner or more questions. Either is completely fine.
The scan session takes place in Singapore at a time that works around your schedule. We capture high-resolution digital scans of all ten of your child's fingers — no ink, no mess, no discomfort. Children almost always find it interesting, not stressful. Even our youngest clients (age 3) settle quickly.
We work at your child's pace. The session typically takes under 15 minutes from arrival to completion.
The scans are processed through the US-patented analytical software. You receive a detailed written report — typically 20 to 30 pages — that is specific to your child. This is not a template. Every section is generated from your child's own fingerprint data.
The report covers: natural learning style, core innate strengths, primary motivation drivers, and communication preferences. Each section includes practical notes for parents.
The consultation is where the report becomes useful. We walk through the findings together — section by section — and translate the data into practical language. What does this mean for how you explain new things to your child? What kinds of activities genuinely energise them? What environments help them feel capable?
Parents often arrive with a list of things they have been puzzling over for years. By the end of this session, most of those things have an explanation — and a direction.
The Genius Code Mapping report is relevant from age three through to twelve, but the reason it matters shifts meaningfully across that range. Understanding where your child sits shapes how you use what you learn.
Your first conversation is always free. We'll help you figure out whether this is the right step for your family right now.
The brain is in its most plastic state. Children in this window are forming their earliest beliefs about whether learning feels safe, whether effort is worthwhile, and whether they are "the kind of person" who can do hard things. Understanding their wiring at three means you can shape that foundation intentionally rather than by accident.
The first years of formal schooling place enormous pressure on children to conform to one mode of learning. Children whose natural style diverges from the classroom norm can pick up messages about their capability that simply aren't true. A parent who understands their child's wiring can intervene thoughtfully — and advocate effectively.
As the PSLE approaches and the secondary school transition looms, the academic pressure in Singapore intensifies dramatically. This is also when children begin forming a more permanent sense of their own identity and capabilities. Knowing your child's motivational profile and learning style at this stage is one of the most practical investments you can make.
Parents who do this report when their child is three often tell us they still reference it when the child is nine. The fingerprint patterns don't change — and neither do the underlying strengths and motivations they reveal. What changes is how your child expresses them, and how much you can do with that knowledge.
Parents who do this report at eleven tell us they wished they'd done it at six. There is no perfect time. But if you're in the three-to-twelve window, the insight is available to you — and the sooner you have it, the longer you have to use it.
Book a Free Discovery CallIs this scientifically proven?
The science of dermatoglyphics — the study of fingerprint ridge patterns and their relationship to neurological development — has a substantial research base spanning decades. The software we use holds a US patent and was developed over approximately 20 years. We describe it accurately: it is a research-backed guidance tool, not a diagnostic instrument. We do not overstate its predictive power.
Will my child find the fingerprint scan uncomfortable?
No. The scan uses a digital optical scanner — no ink, no pressure, no mess. Most children are curious about the process and enjoy watching their fingerprints appear on the screen. Even very young children (age 3 and 4) settle quickly. We work at your child's pace throughout and there is no time pressure.
What age range is the report designed for?
The reports are designed for children aged three to twelve. This reflects the developmental window during which this kind of insight is most practically useful for parents. Within that range, the way you use the report naturally shifts — a report at age four is most useful for shaping early learning environments; a report at eleven is most useful for navigating the PSLE years and secondary school transition.
How long does the full process take from booking to consultation?
From the point of booking, the fingerprint scan can typically be scheduled within one to two weeks. The report is delivered within five working days of the scan. The consultation is then arranged at a time that suits you. Most families complete the full process within three to four weeks of their first enquiry.
Can both parents attend the consultation?
Yes — and we encourage it when possible. The conversation is richer when both parents are present, and the practical guidance lands better when you have both heard it together. If one parent cannot attend, we can arrange a brief follow-up call.
Do the results change as my child gets older?
The fingerprint patterns themselves are fixed from birth and do not change. What changes is how a child expresses their wiring — and how the environment shapes which strengths they develop. The report reflects your child's innate profile, not a snapshot in time. Parents often tell us the report is still useful years after the consultation.