Why Slice Fixes Do Not Stick
Most slice fixes fail because they rely on feel. Clear visual feedback makes the change easier to trust.

If you have tried to fix a slice before, you probably know the pattern. One range session looks promising. Then the next round brings the same weak curve back.
That does not mean you lack effort. It usually means the feedback system is unclear.
Most golfers try to fix a slice by thinking about positions: close the face, swing from the inside, aim differently, turn more, release better. Those ideas can help, but they are hard to repeat when the only feedback arrives after the ball is already in the air.
AimBox helps by making the setup visible first. The rods can show target line, swing direction, and ball position before you make the motion. That matters because many slices start before the club moves.
When the reference is clear, practice becomes less about guessing and more about matching a visible pattern. You can see where you are aimed. You can see the path you are training. You can repeat the same station until it starts to feel familiar.
The goal is not to rebuild your entire swing overnight. The goal is to remove variables so better movement has a chance to stick.