TheVigilante
Senior Member
Founding Member
I've just gone over a course from a women who makes $500k to $1M per month online selling coaching. And it's so bad
What I've noticed is they all play by the same playbook.
Here's the blueprint:
1. Post content and overhype dogshit (OMG, I just had a post that got 55,000 views in 24 hours)
I've had posts that have gotten 72 million views and even then, I still don't hype it as I know people out there are getting 1 billion views. The problem with this is the people with more experience and skill don't teach while people with less experience and skills sell and their selling is over hyping stuff to make people to want to buy. This leads to a saturated market of people who don't get results and have no idea what they're doing because they're being mislead. Only person making money is the person selling the course. Shouldn't be that way.
2. Once you overhype dogshit, start selling dogshit but put some glitter on it.
For me personally, I could teach people how to get 500 million views per month on Facebook to make money with monetization. I'd probably start a community and charge $49-97 per month. Not these people though. Their best month on Facebook would be about 20 million and again, glitter on dogshit. They would turn it into a $3,000 course/blueprint. Most of it would be written by Chat GPT. And most of it when you break it down would simply be wrong. They will tell you why a video went viral when the reality is it has nothing to do with what they are saying. They justify why something went viral to seem smart but because they are so convinced that they are the best, people start to believe them which means more people buy.
3. Show, sell, show and sell.
Most of their posts are aimed at getting people into a funnel. That's it. They don't write posts or do videos to HELP people. They write posts and film content to get you into a funnel. Ethical? Moral? Not really. But does it make a shitload of money? Yes sir.
4. Show results which gives you more results.
This is the secret ingredient. Someone buys your course for $5k. Make sure to screenshot how much you earned for the day. Show everyone you made $5k but lie and say you made it while you were having coffee at a cafe "relaxing". That post will reach more people and you make another $5k sale. Take a photo of the results, show people you've made $10k and all you've done is drink coffee at a cafe and chill at the beach. (Don't actually tell people you've worked your ass off) Tell them you're not really working that hard as that's what most people want. But it's because of that, 99% of students will NEVER see/get good results because they all assume it's easy.
Typical guru shiiiiiiit if you ask me!
What I've noticed is they all play by the same playbook.
Here's the blueprint:
1. Post content and overhype dogshit (OMG, I just had a post that got 55,000 views in 24 hours)
I've had posts that have gotten 72 million views and even then, I still don't hype it as I know people out there are getting 1 billion views. The problem with this is the people with more experience and skill don't teach while people with less experience and skills sell and their selling is over hyping stuff to make people to want to buy. This leads to a saturated market of people who don't get results and have no idea what they're doing because they're being mislead. Only person making money is the person selling the course. Shouldn't be that way.
2. Once you overhype dogshit, start selling dogshit but put some glitter on it.
For me personally, I could teach people how to get 500 million views per month on Facebook to make money with monetization. I'd probably start a community and charge $49-97 per month. Not these people though. Their best month on Facebook would be about 20 million and again, glitter on dogshit. They would turn it into a $3,000 course/blueprint. Most of it would be written by Chat GPT. And most of it when you break it down would simply be wrong. They will tell you why a video went viral when the reality is it has nothing to do with what they are saying. They justify why something went viral to seem smart but because they are so convinced that they are the best, people start to believe them which means more people buy.
3. Show, sell, show and sell.
Most of their posts are aimed at getting people into a funnel. That's it. They don't write posts or do videos to HELP people. They write posts and film content to get you into a funnel. Ethical? Moral? Not really. But does it make a shitload of money? Yes sir.
4. Show results which gives you more results.
This is the secret ingredient. Someone buys your course for $5k. Make sure to screenshot how much you earned for the day. Show everyone you made $5k but lie and say you made it while you were having coffee at a cafe "relaxing". That post will reach more people and you make another $5k sale. Take a photo of the results, show people you've made $10k and all you've done is drink coffee at a cafe and chill at the beach. (Don't actually tell people you've worked your ass off) Tell them you're not really working that hard as that's what most people want. But it's because of that, 99% of students will NEVER see/get good results because they all assume it's easy.
Typical guru shiiiiiiit if you ask me!