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- Nov 4, 2022
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THIS SHOULD SERVE AS A WARNING TO ANY NEW USERS TO THE FORUM, ESPECIALLY YOUNGER USERS. HOWEVER, THIS IS (OR SHOULD BE) COMMON SENSE FOR ANYONE WHO HAS BEEN IN HERE A LONG TIME
GET RICH EASY IS MORE POPULAR THAN EVER BEFORE, AND IT IS PREYING ON THE YOUTH:
For anyone here who has been on social media at all within the past couple of years, I am sure you have seen guys like Iman Gadzhi, Andrew Tate, and Hamza. If not, you have probably seen posts about "escaping the matrix" and talking about money making methods like SMMA, dropshipping, crypto, etc..
These people are trying to target a very specific audience, which this forum is heavily populated with:
The young, ambitious, and lacking life experience kind.
And this is how they get you:
These people are excellent at marketing, and they often try to relate with you. Due to this, it makes it seem like they are like an older brother or a father to you. This helps build a sense of trust between you and the creator. After this, they promote a BS course (that is often times hundreds, if not thousands of dollars) that they claim will make you rich without a lot of work (relative to a normal job). The method they often promote to getting rich is a very low barrier of entry business that sometimes lacks the commandments of control or even time. They manage to sell this to you because they often promote it as the only way to get to that point, or they promote it as something that can get you very rich very quickly.
There is definitely a reason I have never seen any of these people promoting starting a CENTS business (or anything other than their get rich quick & easy schemes): they can't make money off of it, because the average buyer of these courses isn't willing to go through all of that, and they want a quick fix.
And this is what is usually inside the course:
A bunch of "mindset" stuff that will get you absolutely nowhere or knowledge that will help you out a tiny bit in a heavily oversaturated field that won't bring you anywhere near close enough to succeed in it.
These people almost never got rich off of what they promote:
They got rich from selling the overpriced courses, or from another source (like their family, in the form something like wealthy parents or an inheritance).
Do I think courses are bad?:
Not necessarily, as if you buy a course to learn a skill or something similar to that, they could be genuinely useful. However, if you do buy a course, make sure to get something that will actually get you somewhere, not some get-rich-quick-and-easy course from a guru.
GET RICH EASY IS MORE POPULAR THAN EVER BEFORE, AND IT IS PREYING ON THE YOUTH:
For anyone here who has been on social media at all within the past couple of years, I am sure you have seen guys like Iman Gadzhi, Andrew Tate, and Hamza. If not, you have probably seen posts about "escaping the matrix" and talking about money making methods like SMMA, dropshipping, crypto, etc..
These people are trying to target a very specific audience, which this forum is heavily populated with:
The young, ambitious, and lacking life experience kind.
And this is how they get you:
These people are excellent at marketing, and they often try to relate with you. Due to this, it makes it seem like they are like an older brother or a father to you. This helps build a sense of trust between you and the creator. After this, they promote a BS course (that is often times hundreds, if not thousands of dollars) that they claim will make you rich without a lot of work (relative to a normal job). The method they often promote to getting rich is a very low barrier of entry business that sometimes lacks the commandments of control or even time. They manage to sell this to you because they often promote it as the only way to get to that point, or they promote it as something that can get you very rich very quickly.
There is definitely a reason I have never seen any of these people promoting starting a CENTS business (or anything other than their get rich quick & easy schemes): they can't make money off of it, because the average buyer of these courses isn't willing to go through all of that, and they want a quick fix.
And this is what is usually inside the course:
A bunch of "mindset" stuff that will get you absolutely nowhere or knowledge that will help you out a tiny bit in a heavily oversaturated field that won't bring you anywhere near close enough to succeed in it.
These people almost never got rich off of what they promote:
They got rich from selling the overpriced courses, or from another source (like their family, in the form something like wealthy parents or an inheritance).
Do I think courses are bad?:
Not necessarily, as if you buy a course to learn a skill or something similar to that, they could be genuinely useful. However, if you do buy a course, make sure to get something that will actually get you somewhere, not some get-rich-quick-and-easy course from a guru.
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