Share your quantitative expertise
Turn real-world quantitative experience into practical, implementation-focused modules for the global quant community.
Quant Mechanics Lab collaborates with experienced quantitative professionals to create high-quality modules grounded in realistic workflows.
We are particularly interested in content that goes beyond theory and shows how models are structured, validated, implemented and used in practice.
Why contribute
Share your expertise
Show how quantitative models are implemented, validated and used in real financial environments.
Earn recurring revenue
Contributors receive a share of the revenue generated by their modules.
Build reputation
Position yourself as an expert in implementation-focused quantitative finance education.
How collaboration works
A lightweight process. Flexible, practical and transparent.
01 Initial conversation
We discuss your background, areas of expertise and whether there is a strong fit.
02 Idea exploration
03 Content development
If there is a good fit, the collaboration is structured in a way that aligns with the platform’s implementation-focused approach.
04 Publication and growth
Collaboration model
Quant Mechanics Lab is being built as a collaborative platform for high-quality, implementation-focused quantitative finance education.
Collaboration terms are discussed directly with each contributor depending on the content, scope and format involved.
The platform handles hosting, access management and the broader learning environment, while contributors focus on sharing high-value professional knowledge.
- Flexible collaboration structures
- Clear expectations and scope
- Long-term platform vision
Content principles
- Implementation-first, practical mindset
- Clear scope and professional relevance
- Strong explanatory structure
- Realistic workflows over purely theoretical exposition
- No confidential data or proprietary code
Interested in collaborating?
We are currently inviting experienced quantitative professionals to explore potential collaborations with Quant Mechanics Lab.