Alpha Picks and invest-like both target serious retail investors who want a more rigorous process than scrolling Robinhood, but they sit at opposite ends of the "give me a fish vs teach me to fish" spectrum. Alpha Picks is Seeking Alpha's flagship stock-picks newsletter: two curated picks per month, a published track record since 2022, no tools, no screens, no self-service research. invest-like is a research tool where you can evaluate any stock against seven legendary investor frameworks, with AI verdicts and a published cohort backtest, but it does not hand you a "buy this" list.
Picking between them is mostly about whether you want someone to just tell you what to buy (Alpha Picks) or you want the tools to evaluate any stock yourself and make your own call (invest-like).
Disclosure up front: I built invest-like, so I have a structural conflict of interest. Alpha Picks is genuinely better than invest-like on the dimensions where it is built to win, and I will say so explicitly. The goal of this post is to help you pick the right tool for your workflow.
Quick comparison table
| Feature | invest-like | Alpha Picks |
|---|
| Starting price | Free tier + $13/month annual (12 EUR) | $359/year intro, $499/year regular |
| Effective monthly | ~$13/month | ~$30-42/month |
| Format | Self-service research platform | Curated newsletter (2 picks per month) |
| Coverage universe | ~12,500 tickers (browse any name) | Whatever the picks team selects |
| AI verdicts with reasoning | Yes (Buffett Brain, 5-pillar) | No (human-written analyst rationale per pick) |
| Multi-investor framework consensus | Yes (7 frameworks: Buffett, Graham, Lynch, Greenblatt, Munger, Fisher, Smith) | No (single proprietary "Quant" + analyst layer) |
| Multi-investor debate UI | Yes (Boardroom: 4 investor AIs + skeptic) | No |
| RAG over Berkshire shareholder letters | Yes (Ask Buffett, 1977-2025) | No |
| Published backtest | Yes (5-year framework cohort, +73.8 pts) | Yes (live since 2022, published track record) |
| You choose which stocks to research | Yes (any of ~12,500) | No (you get their picks) |
| Halal screening (AAOIFI Standard 21) | Yes | No |
| Multi-language UI | Yes (EN, DE, FR, ES, PT) | English-only |
| Free tier | Yes (3 AI verdicts/week + all rankings) | No free tier (paid subscription only) |
| Team age + size | Solo founder, 2026 launch | Seeking Alpha, founded 2004, picks service since 2022 |
The short read: Alpha Picks wins on "just tell me what to buy" with a human-curated picks list and a real track record since 2022. invest-like wins on "give me the tools to research any stock myself", with seven-framework verdicts, Boardroom debate, Berkshire-letter RAG, and a generous free tier. They are answering different user needs.
Where Alpha Picks genuinely wins
Alpha Picks has been live since July 2022 and the team has built a real picks track record under its founder Steven Cress. A few places they are clearly ahead.
1. The "just tell me what to buy" workflow
Alpha Picks delivers exactly two stock picks per month, every month, with written analyst rationale and entry guidance. If you do not want to think about which stocks to research and just want a curated list to act on, that is the entire point of Alpha Picks. They send the picks, you decide whether to buy, you move on with your life.
invest-like does the opposite. We give you the tools and frameworks to evaluate any stock you care about, but we do not hand you a monthly list of "buy these two now". The closest thing is the 7-of-7 framework consensus tier at /consensus/, but that is a screen output, not a "we recommend buying these" newsletter.
If you specifically want the picks done for you, Alpha Picks is built for that and invest-like is not.
2. Published live track record since 2022
Alpha Picks publishes its full live performance since the service launched in July 2022. Every pick is timestamped, the cumulative return is shown, and the track record is openly comparable to the S&P 500 over the same window. Whether the track record holds up over a longer market cycle is the open question, but the transparency of "here is every pick we made and here is what it did" is a real product strength.
invest-like also publishes a 5-year backtest at /track-record/, but it is a backtest of a single methodology (the 7-of-7 framework consensus cohort), not a real-time live picks newsletter. Different shapes of "track record".
3. Human-written analyst rationale
Each Alpha Picks pick comes with a human-written analyst write-up explaining the thesis. The writing is intentional, the reasoning is layered, and a human is on the hook for the call.
invest-like's verdicts are LLM-generated from a structured framework (Buffett Brain runs the 5-pillar rubric, the Boardroom debate composes the multi-persona argument). The reasoning is grounded in real data and published methodology, but the writing is machine-generated. Both have advantages. Human analysts can spot qualitative nuances the framework will miss. AI verdicts can run consistently against 12,500 names where a human analyst can cover maybe 20 to 50.
If you specifically value human accountability and human judgement in the analyst layer, Alpha Picks gives you a named person and their reasoning. invest-like gives you a methodology you can audit.
4. Connection to the broader Seeking Alpha ecosystem
Alpha Picks subscribers often pair the picks with Seeking Alpha Premium, which gives them analyst articles, conference-call transcripts, the Quant ratings, and the broader community. The ecosystem is mature and the content depth on a name like AAPL on Seeking Alpha is genuinely deep across hundreds of contributor articles.
invest-like is a standalone tool. We do not have a community of contributors, transcript archive, or analyst marketplace. We do one thing (framework verdicts on stocks) and we ship it deeply.
5. Cadence and discipline
Two picks per month, every month. The cadence is built into the product. Some users find that cadence valuable: it forces them to keep adding new ideas to the portfolio without overtrading. invest-like has no equivalent forcing function. You decide when to research.
Where invest-like genuinely wins
invest-like is not a picks newsletter. It is a self-service research tool. Here is where that approach wins.
1. You can research any stock, not just the ones they picked
The 7-of-7 framework consensus on invest-like applies to ~12,500 tickers. You can open /buffett/aapl/ for Apple, or NVDA, or some German small-cap, or a name you heard about on a podcast last week. Any ticker, any time, with the same structured verdict.
Alpha Picks delivers two picks per month. If you want to research a stock that is not on their list, they cannot help you with that specific name. Their product is a list, not a tool.
2. AI verdicts grounded in published frameworks
invest-like's Buffett Brain produces a structured 5-pillar verdict for any stock: moat, durability, management quality, financial strength, and valuation. Each pillar gets its own paragraph with the specific data point that triggered the scoring decision, so you can verify or disagree with each line rather than reading a pure black-box recommendation.
Alpha Picks gives you a written thesis from an analyst, which is great for the picked stock but does not help you evaluate the other ~12,498 names you might want to check.
3. Multi-investor framework consensus
invest-like runs every stock against the published rules of seven legendary investors separately: Buffett, Graham, Fisher, Lynch, Greenblatt, Munger, and Terry Smith. Each framework returns a pass/partial/fail verdict with the underlying number. The composite "7-of-7 consensus" tier (currently 47 stocks) is the single highest-conviction signal on the platform.
Alpha Picks uses Seeking Alpha's proprietary Quant system plus analyst judgement. It is one process producing two picks per month, not seven independent frameworks scored on every stock.
4. The Boardroom: multi-investor debate
invest-like's Boardroom simulates a live debate between four investor AIs (Buffett, Graham, Lynch, Greenblatt) plus a dedicated skeptic role, each arguing from their actual framework rules with citations. No competitor in the retail category ships this format. Definitely not Alpha Picks.
5. Ask Buffett with Berkshire-letter RAG
invest-like indexes every Berkshire Hathaway shareholder letter from 1977 to 2025, plus Charlie Munger's commentary. Ask Buffett a question about any stock and the answer cites the specific letter year and section. Real quotes from the actual source text. Alpha Picks has nothing like this.
6. Published 5-year cohort backtest
invest-like publishes the open backtest at /track-record/. The 7-of-7 framework consensus cohort (47 stocks as of May 2026) returned a median +73.8 percentage points above the S&P 500 over a rolling 5-year window, with about 85 percent of the cohort beating the index. Server-locked entry timestamps, documented methodology.
This is structurally different from Alpha Picks's live track record. Alpha Picks shows you "here is every pick the service made since 2022". invest-like shows you "here is how a systematic 7-framework methodology would have performed over a 5-year window". Both are useful, both are honest, they answer different questions.
7. Halal Mode (AAOIFI Standard 21)
invest-like applies the AAOIFI Standard 21 halal screen on every stock and layers it on top of the 7-framework consensus. Roughly 1,500 stocks pass the halal filter, and the subset that also passes the framework consensus is the high-conviction halal cohort. Alpha Picks does not ship a halal filter on its picks.
8. Multi-language UI
invest-like ships in English, German, French, Spanish, and Portuguese. Alpha Picks is English-only.
9. Pricing and free tier
invest-like is 12 EUR per month annual (~$13/month) and has a generous free tier (3 AI verdicts per week, all rankings, the published backtest). Alpha Picks is $359 per year intro and $499 per year regular ($30-42 per month effectively) with no free tier. You are paying about 3x more for Alpha Picks at the renewal rate, and the workflow you get is "two picks per month" rather than "any stock, any time".
Who should pick Alpha Picks
You will probably get more out of Alpha Picks if:
- You want someone else to do the picking and just want a curated list to act on
- You value a named human analyst with accountability on each pick
- You like the discipline of receiving exactly two new ideas per month
- You already subscribe to (or want to pair with) Seeking Alpha Premium for the ecosystem
- You are comfortable spending $359-499 per year for a curated picks service with a published live track record
- You do not particularly care about evaluating arbitrary stocks yourself, you just want the picks
Who should pick invest-like
You will probably get more out of invest-like if:
- You want the tools to research any stock yourself, not just the ones a newsletter picked
- You want to understand WHY a stock is being scored the way it is, with reasoning per pillar
- You want seven different value-investing frameworks scored separately on the same stock
- You want the multi-investor Boardroom debate
- You want Berkshire-letter citations via Ask Buffett
- You care about a methodology-level published backtest you can verify
- You need a halal-investing filter
- You read research in German, French, Spanish, or Portuguese
- You want a generous free tier to evaluate before paying
- You want to pay $13/month rather than $30-42/month
The honest case for using both
If your budget allows it, Alpha Picks plus invest-like is a coherent stack for different sides of the workflow:
- Use Alpha Picks for: the curated monthly picks, the human analyst rationale, the cadence
- Use invest-like for: stress-testing each Alpha Picks pick against the 7 frameworks (does Buffett, Graham, Lynch agree?), running the Boardroom debate on their pick, asking Buffett what he would think, evaluating any other stock that catches your interest outside the newsletter
Total cost: roughly $42-55 per month combined, depending on Alpha Picks tier. Cheaper than a single Bloomberg seat by a factor of about 750, and you cover both "curated picks" and "self-service research" sides of the workflow.
A natural use case: Alpha Picks emails you their two picks for the month, you open each one in invest-like at /buffett/[ticker]/, and see whether the 7-framework consensus agrees. If both the curated newsletter and the systematic framework agree, that is a higher-conviction signal than either alone.
How to verify this comparison yourself
The honest test: ask which job you actually need done.
- If your job is "I want someone to tell me what two stocks to buy each month", Alpha Picks is the answer and invest-like is the wrong tool for that specific need.
- If your job is "I want to evaluate any stock that catches my interest against multiple value-investing frameworks", invest-like is the answer and Alpha Picks is the wrong tool for that specific need.
Specifically:
- On Alpha Picks: look at their published track record since 2022. Read a sample pick if they make one available. Decide whether you want this kind of human-curated, cadence-based picks service.
- On invest-like at /buffett/aapl/ (or any ticker): read the Buffett Brain 5-pillar verdict, the per-framework consensus chips, run the Boardroom (free up to 3x per week), ask Buffett a question about the stock. Then open /consensus/ to see the current 47-stock 7-of-7 consensus tier.
Decide which workflow actually fits how you invest.
Common questions
Is Alpha Picks worth $359-499 per year? If you specifically want a curated picks newsletter from a real human analyst team with a published live track record since 2022, yes. The track record is openly comparable to the S&P 500 over the service's life. If you want self-service research tools to evaluate any stock yourself, you are paying for the wrong thing.
Is invest-like worth $13 per month? If you want self-service research with seven-framework verdicts on any stock, yes. The free tier gives you three AI verdicts per week and all the ranking pages, so you can evaluate the methodology before paying anything.
Does Alpha Picks give you the analysis to make your own decision? Each pick comes with a written analyst rationale. You can read the thesis and decide whether to buy. The service does not hand you tools to evaluate a different stock that is not on their list.
Does invest-like make stock recommendations? No. invest-like is an educational tool that scores stocks against published frameworks and publishes a backtest. We do not say "buy this stock" or send curated picks. The 7-of-7 consensus tier is a screen output, not a recommendation list.
Can I cancel Alpha Picks easily? Seeking Alpha's products are subscription-based with the usual auto-renewal terms. Read the cancellation flow before subscribing if cancellation friction matters to you.
Can I cancel invest-like? Yes, anytime through the /account/ page. Annual subscriptions are pro-rated within the 7-day money-back window. Monthly subscriptions cancel at the end of the current period.
Which one has a longer track record? Alpha Picks has been live since July 2022 (about 3.5 years as of mid-2026). invest-like's backtest covers a rolling 5-year window of a single systematic methodology. They are different kinds of "track record" and not strictly comparable.
Can I trust either of these? Both publish methodology and performance at meaningful depth. Trust the methodology and trust the performance disclosure, not the verdict or pick in isolation. Past picks and past framework verdicts do not guarantee future stock returns. Do your own research.
Disclosure
This is an opinionated comparison written by the founder of invest-like. Alpha Picks is genuinely a strong product in the curated-picks newsletter category and I have tried to be specific about where they win. If you think I have mischaracterised Alpha Picks anywhere, please email me at zaid@invest-like.com and I will update the post.
Alpha Picks is a product of Seeking Alpha, Inc., not affiliated with invest-like. Both are educational tools, not investment advisers. Past picks and past framework verdicts do not guarantee future stock returns. Do your own research.
Author: Zaid Ghazal, founder of invest-like, indie SaaS, Kiel, Germany.