Fake Gurus and Contrepreneurs

UPDATE: this post has been heavily edited on December 7th 2020, following my decision to take down most of the content where I expose Fake Gurus directly.

Hi (Italian) readers,

This is a follow up of my previous post about TIMWWTM and his company. But it’s not a post centered on him. It’s about Fake Gurus, and how to spot them.

Yes, I know, I also want to do something else with my time. But I think this follow up is very needed, and my bet is that this time even non Italian speaking readers can get a lot of value out of it.

I’m not investing more energies in my anti-shark effort in the short term, promised. But you have to wait for the first chapters of my Money Guide (title still TBD) a bit more πŸ™‚

While we all wait that Estonian Lawyers go to Switzerland, I couldn’t simply move on and forget about this TIMWWTM guy. I had to dig deeper. A comment from a reader pointed me to some of TIMWWTM’S mentors and courses he attended. Those were a good start πŸ™‚

At first I thought that he was a probably acceptable Personal Finance mentor who sells overpriced products and who implements aggressive marketing techniques and questionable communications practices. His arrogance and tendency to insult people on his Facebook group pissed me off enough to write a post about him. That was it.

Then I discovered that his strategy (not to be confused with LS, his expensive flagshit product) follows very common patterns, taught in expensive marketing courses. He didn’t invent a thing! And I’m here showing what I learned during last week, i.e. what are the common patterns of these fake gurus and contrepreneurs so that you might be able to spot them, hopefully before it’s too late.

Mind that this is a double edged sword though. We’re going to see how to recognize fake gurus and ruthless marketing professionals, but we’re also going to learn how to use the same techniques to become one. Please don’t. And please, keep me accountable on the light side of the moon πŸ˜‰

Book

Let’s start from the basics.

If your candidate Fake Guru has written one or more books, please check that it’s not just a marketing technique.

Take a look at this Frank Merenda video.

Merenda says that you need to have written a book. Ideally a new book every year. The book is your business card today. You don’t have to write it, you can hire a ghostwriter. Don’t worry, nobody is going to read it and we don’t care. In your potential customers’ heads if you wrote a book then you’re an expert, you have authority in that sector. It’s a mind hacking strategy for your potential customers. And the sales funnel can start. If someone happens to read your book, the book should be a sales letter in incognito, i.e. disguised as a book. The book should lead to other media of ours, to push potential customers to finally become real customers, we are not interested in writing books per se.

According to Merenda, the three most important things about your book are:

What about the content? Who the fuck cares, nobody is going to read it!

It can be Lorem Ipsum all the way down! Take a look at this amazing video by Mike Winnet (more about him below) on how to write an Amazon Best Seller with empty pages!

Mind that I’m not saying every book is a scam, of course.

Ok, let’s move on.

Blog

What’s the role of a Fake Guru’s blog? Same as above: to push leads down the sales funnel.

In general that’s true for all their free content: to give you no actionable material, letting you commit more time with them (foot in the door strategy, sunk cost fallacy bias), exposing you to fake scarcity, and trying to sell their expensive products to you.

I wanted to know more about this script. Has it been codified? Are there patterns? How can I recognize the individual tactics and name them? Why does these behaviors make me feel unease? I perceive there’s something wrong (and shitty), but I need to be able to tell exactly why.

So I ended up into another rabbit hole. A very interesting one though πŸ™‚

Please, follow me this way.

MLMs

I was reading a nice post on r/personalfinance dated June 28th 2020. Uff, the original post has already been deleted on July 2nd, and I forgot to take a screenshot. Anyway, comments are still there. OP was a guy who has been contacted by a high school friend out of the blue, and offered “free” material to become “financial independent” and a meeting with a “coach”. He asked what he should expect.

All the comments (I’ve read I think a hundred of them at least) pointed to some sort of MLM Scam.

Wait RIP, you offer a lot of free material, you coached people, and you talk about FI!

Ouch, you’re right! Am I a scam? O_o

Well, I’m not selling you any product. Yet. Haha!

Anyway, this post will teach you how to judge if I am a scam or not πŸ™‚

Back on track.

The comments of the above mentioned Reddit thread are awesome. I’ve learned a lot just by reading them. I’m of course aware of MLM (Multi Level Marketing) scams, and their shady cousin Network Marketing. I have friends who fell for it, lost money, lost friends, and now flip burgers. Luckily not many, and just with Herbalife. Stay the fuck away from that shit.

I’ve learned few terms like Foot in Door, the psychological manipulation tricks, the “yes momentum”… some ex Mormons and ex Jehovah Witnesses jumped in telling that the same manipulative techniques were used in their environment as well. Many first hand experiences with MLM and some sad stories.

I recommend you to read the top rated comments of that thread, it’s totally worth your time πŸ˜‰

Coffeezilla

I’ve also followed some of the external links from that r/personalfinance thread, and re-watched the John Oliver’s Last Week Tonight video about MLM.

one of the external links made me discover the Coffeezilla YouTube channel.

Coffeezilla (amazing channel, btw) is specialized in Fake Gurus detection and documentation. Amazing job, seriously. I loved his video about Mike Vestil and other Tai Lopez clones, the one about Sam Ovens (about fake reviews), and this one about Siraj Raval, who made online courses stealing others’ code on GitHub. Good job CZ!

Btw, CZ helped me recognize one of the standard technique used by Fake Gurus: the use of logical fallacies and plain lies to try to denigrate the work of those exposing them. Thanks CZ!

But the video that I needed to watch to detect I was heading to the right direction to decode TIMWWTM is the following one, titled “Top 10 Fake Guru RED FLAGS To Watch For!!!” Yeah, it has a couple of exclamation marks more than acceptable and a catchy thumbnail, but it’s a genuinely good video.

What are these 10 red flags? Let’s go thru the list together.

1. Has a “Mastermind”

Wait RIP, you said few times you are part of a mastermind group!

Ouch, I’m definitely a scam!

Actually, my mastermind group is just 4 people (me, Julianek, ElMago, Mr1M) who have fun meeting and talking about FI related stuff. It was not even initiated by me, I was invited to it. And I’m so glad!

What CZ means, explained later in the video, is that their “mastermind” thing is something they will sell to you, like a membership to an exclusive community where to discuss private things.

2. Luxury cars in the video

You look at people like Warren Buffett, Bill Gates… do they show off their wealth? No, they don’t need to show it off, they got it. Often times when people show it off… mmmh!

3. Disparages 9-5 jobs

RIP, this is you πŸ™‚

Haha yeah, a bit. I don’t think I’m wired for a 9-to-5, but that’s what I’ve done for most of my professional life. And I’ll keep doing it for a while. I dream about a day when I won’t work 100% anymore. I know I can already be there if I really wanted, or at least I could take concrete steps toward a partial retirement. But let’s not digress…

I definitely don’t disparage 9-to-5 jobs! I don’t sell anyone the dream they can quit their job tomorrow if they listen to me!

Guys, hard work first πŸ™‚

4. Invites you to a “live webinar”

Obvious, classic πŸ˜‰

Spoiler: It’s not a “webinar”, you’re not going to learn anything. It’s a long sales pitch for their expensive products πŸ˜‰

5. Paid course

You attended the webinar, and now you’re thinking about purchasing their $997 course on Amazon Dog Shitting.

CZ: “Does it mean that all paid courses are scam? No!

In my opinion:

  • If it costs more than 100 (ok, make it 150, like the FS Learning Community which is much much more than a course) you should probably not pay for it. Or at least question it 10 times before purchasing it. Go for it if you think the free content the creator releases (like I did for FS and Nat Eliason) is very high quality and you want to say “thank you” to the creator.
  • If it costs more 1000 just run the fuck away. Run now!
  • If it costs more than 10k call the police. Seriously.

RIP, what about 9997?

Haha I’ll let you decide πŸ˜€

6. Under 35 years of age

CZ: “to be a coach, you kind of have to have done it all, and most people under 35 just haven’t had enough life experience. Your life barely started until you’re 20 years old.

Haha a bit unfair and ageist, but it makes sense that it’s harder for a kid to have enough experience to self elect as a guru.

7. No verifiable financial history

CZ: “Financial history? They make big claims with very little evidence for those claims

It’s pretty common for fake gurus to not use LinkedIn (or be irrelevant there), not disclose their numbers and so on.

8. Runs Youtube or Facebook ads

Yeah, everybody does that.

If the first contact with a seller is via Facebook or YT ads, it’s probably a Fake Guru.

9. “Free book”

Or any kind of free material packaged as a book, booklet, report… anything you’re asked your email in exchange for goes in this category. Registering to a Facebook group and receiving a shitload of email spam counts as well.

Even a “real” book, written just as a business card (like our friend Frank Merenda said above), can be considered in this category despite not being free.

Everything that puts you into the sales funnel (or lead funnel) should be a red flag, even if it’s for free. I have a very low tolerance for that.

CZ: “fake gurus know how psychology works, they are geniuses with psychology. When you are given something for free, you’re more likely to go and buy the higher priced product. They have your email, and they know you’re interested, so they’re gonna relentlessly pursue your business and try to upsell you on these crazy products

10. Can’t stop talking about mentors (This is only a red flag if #5 is true as well)

CZ: “Nothing wrong with mentors, but often times this language is used to pitch themselves as your future mentor

but

CZ: “as soon as someone puts themselves in a mentorship over you, they now know what’s best for you… I would say mentors are good, but find ones who are not interested in profiting off you

I must be careful to not go that way myself.

I think I’m doing good with mentoring (which is different from coaching), via helping as many people who asked for my help as I can for free (like I did with Saving Ninja), usually about Software Engineering career.

Fun fact, Tiago Forte (which in my personal ranking is NOT a fake guru even though his products are guru-like priced) tweeted about this video, and produced a short doc on unethical online course marketing.

And for the sake of completeness, here‘s also a bad review of Coffeezilla himself, which – according to my habit of only checking bad reviews of products – is pretty mild and confirms my huge thumb up for CZ πŸ™‚

Next.

James Jani

I’ve watched three videos from Graham Stephan. One about fake gurus, not good enough in my opinion, one about GaryVee and one about Kiyosaki. Those last two were pretty good.

But I’m not going to spend time on documenting them here.

And then this James Jani’s video about Fake Gurus popped up in the recommendations:

Yes, I’m watching videos of people half my age and learning a lot.

This video is very well made.

James starts with Tai Lopez “here in my garage” September 2015 famous ads, that I’ve skipped 100 times I guess.

Introducing those fake gurus who hook you into their free material, have a cult like following, and in the end they’re not trying to teach you anything: the main goal is to keep you hooked to their products.

And evolved defining a script for Fake Gurus in few steps:

1. Pick your niche

JJ: “The actual product being sold is not that important. But it’s usually a niche. It doesn’t matter what you pick, but preferably it’s something to do with wealth, health, or relationships… something you can really target people’s insecurities and their dreams.”

This is very insightful. Targeting insecurities, vulnerable people.

Personal Finance and Investing works well πŸ™‚

2. Create your course

JJ: “it doesn’t matter if you don’t know what you’re talking about… you can hire an expert, get them to write a script you can read out to a video camera… Preferably you have a little bit of experience that you can give some general knowledge that could be probably be found in a book or if you google search for it. It doesn’t matter what’s in the course, what matters is how you market it.

Well said bro.

Marketing is what fake gurus spend all their money on to create a cult like following.

Let’s move on.

3. Marketing

JJ: “It’s all about marketing in this industry. If you can’t market your course properly, you’re not going to make as much as you should be. Put ads wherever the hell you can find people who are young enough and probably in a vulnerable position where they want to buy into whatever the hell you’re selling them. Sell a dream. High income, financial freedom, travel the world, no 9-to-5 jobs, luxury… you just have to click the link below and join their free training

The goal is to appeal to people’s emotions, to hook people in. From leads to prospects.

Remember, the sales funnel.

So the leads enter your funnel, and you offer them your webinar, free live events, free content.

JJ: “make sure you keep it a little lengthy. In the case of a webinar, 1 to 3 hours. The longer it is, the more time they spend with you, the more trust they build, the higher the chances you can sell them on higher priced courses.

The lengthy thing resonated a lot. It also applies to infinite length copywriting pages. Foot-in-door, pre-suasion, sunk costs fallacy, feeling guilty for having wasted your time (or theirs). In one word: commitment.

Ah, btw, I joined the free Merenda course on copywriting titled “Ghiaccio agli Eschimesi” (ice to the Eskimos), i.e. how to write a copy page so good that you could sell Ice to the Eskimos with it. Will let you know what’s inside πŸ˜‰

JJ: “we’re not trying to teach anything in these webinars, the goal of the webinars is to make them ask even more questions, and the goal after that is to get them to buy your course

Got it!

JJ: “now tell them your backstory: you’re just like them, you were poor, there wasn’t anything special about you, tell them how you hated your job, how you were stuck in the rat race… you need to sound like you were in the position that they’re in at current point in time. If you’ve done your ads campaign right, you’ve probably attracted the most vulnerable people. Those are our ideal targets.

Ouch, so true. So common. So easy to spot.

JJ: “you also want to rewire their mindset for your benefit: tell them that money is abundant so that when it comes down to the point where you give them the price of your course, in their heads the objection of ‘oh, it’s too expensive’ is already been overcome. ‘It doesn’t matter if I finance this with 2000 Pounds that I don’t have yet’

This is also a very good point.

The last two points were not clear in my mind before watching the video.

JJ: “you want to tell them that they need to be responsible for what they do because when they buy your course, and it doesn’t work for them, you want to make sure that they’re not blaming you, that they believe it’s their fault.

Another good point!

Time for The Hard Sell:

JJ: “Show them testimonials, make it sound easy easy easy… but it’s not a get rich scheme, make sure you don’t say those words…

Don’t say it’s a GRQ scheme, but make it seems like one πŸ˜‰

JJ: “hold on, some of these people would still have a rational part in their brain which we don’t want. Some of them are probably thinking ‘it’s a bit expensive, I don’t think I can afford it…’ so here’s what you want to do: you want to create scarcity

4. Profit

JJ: “You really didn’t think we were just selling courses, right? Remember our goal: to keep them hooked to our products! First you sell a course, then you sell a Mastermind class, then you might sell a live event, then sell them even a bigger courseyou practically have an army with you. These guys watched you religiously

That’s so easy to spot in hindsight!

Maybe I’m the only one who has never taken a marketing course, but to me seeing these videos “explaining the obvious” is both a disgusting and an eye opening experience.

JJ: “make them feel special at your live event!

I so desperately want to join a live event now!

JJ: “of course, you don’t tell them the truth… I mean, after all we’re selling shovels to a gold rush. We don’t tell them the reason we’re so damn rich and living the life they want to live is because we’ve sold them a dream, and sold them our courses that aren’t really gonna get them there.

JJ: “and we told them that they are responsible for their own actions so each course they buy, and each failure thy get, they are the ones that feel like they’re completely responsible. I mean, some of these guys are so desperate in their situations that they have to believe it’s gonna work for them.

JJ: “it doesn’t matter at the end of the day. You got your millions, you can sit back, relax, enjoy, and watch you webinars, courses, all selling themselves

A pretty dark ending, but not far from reality.

Conclusions

JJ: “I don’t have anything against online courses … [] … but the kind of courses I’m talking about, they’re not thousands of pounds. Most of them are 10 Pounds here and there. In total I’ve spend 200 Pounds on online courses. They’re not trying to sell me a dream.

I’ve spent 250 Dollars total (Nat Eliason’s Roam course, Farnam Street’s Learning community), mostly as a “thank you” message for the amazing high quality content the creators give away for free anyway.

We’re on the same page.

JJ: “the next time you come across these gurus, someone that sells you a course for thousands really really question whether the value they give you in that course is worth that money because the chances are you can find any of this information in a book or searching it on YouTube – which is probably where they got the information anyway (LOL)”

So true. So f***ing true!

JJ: “What’s important to always look out for is: is what they’re teaching me the method in which they made their money? With most of these people just probably isn’t.

Very good point, and I should also ask myself, if I ever want to step up and teach more: “what can I teach that’s authentic?”

I made most of my money via getting very good at Software Engineering (high earning), and I have a lot to show up for it because I’ve always been frugal (relatively low spending), and I’ve invested my money wisely since 4.5 years now (investing).

I think I’d be good to go, but it’s always good to check your assumptions and credibility.

JJ: “The moment you see these fake gurus pandering to your deepest desires, and really trying to sell you on an emotional level… just RUN. It’s almost never worth it. Ultimately you’re just a number in their funnel to them, and in their bank account.

Mike Winnet

But my rabbit hole didn’t end on James Jani channel (good quality, James, congrats).

The endgame was finding the best channel about fake gurus on the internet: Mike Winnet.

Mike Winnet’s channel is funny, and not only because he looks like what would happen if you genetically mix Mark Manson and Marshall from How I met your mother:

I spent a lot of time watching his videos. Mike is really awesome!

Discovered thanks to Coffeezilla, who made a collaboration with him, where they explained how many fake gurus own their google searches: if you search “is [YOUR_GURU] a scam?” you’ll find some sort of content created by YOUR_GURU answering that question. And guess what? You end up believing YOUR_GURU is not a scam πŸ˜€

You can start from the above mentioned “how to write an Amazon Best Seller with empty pages“, or his experience with a GaryVee and Grant Cardone conference (before, after – this is really amazing!) where you’ll find the Contrepreneur Bingo:

We’re going to comment on all the check boxes in a few minutes, do not worry πŸ™‚

Watch also his amazing series “Get rich or die buying” (roboadvisor, crypto mining, flipping properties), and listen to his podcast named “Not Another D*ckhead with a Podcast“. Didn’t check it out yet though, only a single episode (linked at the end of this section).

Anyway, the video I’m unnecessary procrastinating showing to you is Mike’s masterpiece:

The Contrepreneur Formula Exposed

Note: the video linked here is the “remastered” version, because of false copyright claims by some of the fake guru. The old video is back up again (copyright claim resolved).

Note: Mike coined the term Contrepreneur as a short name for “Con Entrepreneur”, i.e. an entrepreneur who persuades his targets to do or believe something by lying to them (meaning of the verb “to con”). Awesome!

Note: Mike’s formula works best for Live Events, but we can find most of the shady and manipulative tactics in our sharks.

Here’s the Contrepreneur Formula in its entirety:

According to Mike, the free event is usually the first stage of the sales funnel.

MW: “… and then he’ll say that usually he charges people ten thousand Pounds a day

LOL! Take a look at EVERY sales page of EVERY Italian Fake Guru!

MW: “… but for us lucky people that are down there he’ll probably sell it for a discounted price that ends in a seven

Wait, what do you mean by “ends in a seven”? More on this later πŸ˜‰

Step 1: Targeting ads on social media

Easy.

They invite you on their free live event promising a “shortcut to success”, and “secrets to become millionaire”. So you can earn more money than you’ve ever imagined, easier than you ever thought possible.

The content? Usually revolving around “what people want”, i.e. Wealth, Health, or Happiness.

A modern alternative to “free event” is a Facebook Group. Cheaper, easier, you can force people to give you their email addresses to join this group, and you can brag about “Ours is the biggest community about Personal Finance in Italy”. Spoiler: it’s usually not a community, but a George Orwell style group, where you can only kiss the Lider Maximo’s ass all the time, and don’t even try to ask questions that might lead to exchanging information that the Lider Maximo is selling. Don’t even try to express doubts or criticize the Lider’s actions, words, and behaviors.

Usually the live event starts early and lasts for a long time. Remember what James Jani said? Make them lengthy.

According to MW it’s because the contrepreneurs want to leverage on your Decision Fatigue: “the deteriorating quality of decisions made by an individual after a long session of decision making“.

In contrepreneurs terms: victims tend to be complicit in their own deception.

If you’re thinking (like me): “I wouldn’t fall for it, it doesn’t matter how much exposure I get”, mind that everybody can get scammed. It has has less to do with your IQ, and more to do with where you are in life.

Remember? focusing on those more vulnerable.

Step 2: Get you to Commit

This is what we’ve already seen with pre-suasion, yes momentum, foot-in-door.

You are driven to say “yes” a lot of times, to agree with basic common sense stuff, to establish trust and to make it harder to say no later, when it’s time to buy their product.

Take a look at this good article where Robert Cialdini explains what pre-suasion is.

In a live event, not participating in a “yes momentum” can single you out, and make you feel guilty.

Facebook Groups, “communities”, are a continuous yes momentum, and going against the current will make you publicly shamed, laughed at, and finally terminated. No negativity (toward the dream) allowed. No skepticism either.

Step 3: Bullshit Backstory

The story of their own struggle to success. How they were exactly like you are right now, just a couple of years earlier.

The strategy here is called “leveraging wishful identification“, i.e. the attempt to make their prospect customers desire to be like you.

Which means, on one hand, showing how like their targets the contrepreneur was just few years ago, and how wealthy/healthy/happy/successful he/she is right now. Since he/she might not be as wealthy as claimed, better to show it off: expensive dresses, luxury cars, watches, a tie, sunglasses, expensive shoes.

They – those vulnerable bunch – must dream of becoming as successful and wealthy as the contrepreneur. It doesn’t matter if the contrepreneur can back the claims with facts and figures as long as he/she appears successful that’s all that’s required!

… Even if he/she might just have rented it all out, and is broke as fuck.

Potential problem for the Contrepreneur is that facts can be checked. And they address it via Liar’s Advantage:

On one hand, people are more willing to swallow a lie from someone we perceive wealthy and successful. On the other hand, if one lives and believes in the lies he continuously tells, it’s hard to distinguish a lie from the truth.

This technique is mostly used by politicians. People who can say X and its contrary, and when challenged they reply with “I never said X”… and they end up governing countries like US, UK, Brazil, Russia, and sooner or later Italy as well.

We believe in a lie if it aligns with what we want to believe. It’s a degeneration of the very well known Confirmation Bias.

And, my personal opinion, the lies that work best are those the liar truly believes in. Schizophrenia is a common trait among convincing dictators and prophets. I’m sure most of the Contrepreneurs journeys begun with some sort of acknowledgement that they’re telling lies (with few exceptions), but at one point they convince themselves that there’s no line between their lies and the truth. In the end lying all the time is not easy, and the brain needs some solid ground to attach to, and it makes it up! It’s called Plausible Deniability.

Step 4: Establishing Authority

So the lies are accepted because the Contrepreneur is gaining your trust, leveraging on your emotions.

At this point lies can go wild, and bold claims are made. And accepted by newfound cult members.

Bold claims, accepted because of perceived (fake) authority, because of cult-like following, because of leveraging on emotions and selling a dream, because this guru has an amazing and convincing bullshit backstory.

Apparently it works in any business, any country, any culture, any sector.

Bold claims that reinforce the established authority status, must also be kept vague, so it seems they’re addressing your specific needs or wants.

Step 5: Fake Social Proof and Testimonials

MW: “Picture, text, or video testimonials are there to show you that other people, just like you, have bought this product and became successful. If they can do it, so can you. Genuine testimonials are a great way for a business to build trust. But testimonials are very easy to fake.

MW: “Sometimes one of the ‘perks’ for these guys ‘premium products’ is that you can talk to future events. To promote your business. And to convince you that they have been successful thru this program. Becoming another part of the Contrepreneur formula. Unethical. Breaching all kinds of consumer protection laws.

Wow, never thought about it in legal terms.

MW: “At this point you might think this is too good to be true. So the Contrepreneur uses a strategy called Objection Removal. They aim is to remove all barriers that might prevent you from buying.

Usually connected with pricing. The most common objection is “wait, do I need to pay 1500 Euros to learn this?”

MW: “When you’re hit with a stupid price at the next stage of the con, your gut instinct – which you should trust – is going to be saying things like ‘this seems expensive, he’s not showing me any proof that this works’.”

I know where this is going…

MW: “You’re asked to question your own beliefs.”

Which is called Gaslighting, and it’s a form of psychological manipulation.

Step 6: Low Value Product

MW: “If you buy, you have now committed to the scam. Even worse: the longer you believe the scam, the harder it is to admit you have been conned. You just throw more and more money at it rather than admit that you’ve been had off. Because the Contrepreneur knows he’s overcharging for a Minimum Viable Product

Wow, it’s even nicer to see it in words.

Step 7: The Value Stack

MW: “Worthless add-ons to make the product appear like it’s more valuable

I don’t know if Mike refers to extras to the MVP (monthly reports, access to a private group, et cetera) or if he refers to other products to upsell (like a Gold Community / Mastermind, a more expensive product, an even more expensive product…).

I like to think that it’s the latter, but I might have some bias πŸ™‚

Step 8: Fake Discounted Price

There’s a special price, only for today.

You need to hurry.

You’re lucky, you got a special discount!Β Usually in the range of 60-90%. A bit unrealistic, don’t you think? Something like from 6k to 2k. And btw, if you search for the Contrepreneur course prices you’ll never find the original price asked anywhere. It’s fake. It’s made up. It’s called Anchoring. Now you convinced yourself that the original price was 6k, yeah a bit expensive, but today special offer, only 2k, is a fucking third of that! It’s on huge sale! And it’s always 2k (for the entry level product, every Contrepreneur). Well, almost 2k πŸ™‚

I’d bet it’s 1999 πŸ™‚

No, it’s probably 1997.

It always ends with a seven.

What do you mean… how… why?

There’s been some pseudo science behind pricing. It seems ending in a 7 converts better. And now everybody does this! “It appears more valuable

Step 9: NLP

NLP is Neuro-Linguistic Programming, another pseudo-scientific approach to communication.

Things likeBuy now or you will be poor forever“, “buy now, you can’t afford not to do it!“, “buy now!“, “buy now!!

Doesn’t it sound familiar? πŸ˜€

Step 10: Fake Scarcity

MW: “The next step of the Contrepreneur formula is to utilize the power of scarcity.”

Leveraging on FOMO, the product must appear to be (artificially) scarce. Scarcity tactics have been used since stone age. According to MW, sometimes they are legitimate: “If Nike releases limited edition training shoes, I’m going to be in the front of that queue wanting to buy them

But… the scarcity used in selling digital products is artificial, it’s fake.

Stage 11: Plants

This is completely new to me. Having (fake) people interested in purchasing your products to increase the perception of scarcity and social proof. It’s like fake reviews / social proof, but “live”. I mean, someone who – like you – is considering the purchase, but it’s being “faster than you”.

MW: “I didn’t see a single person being turned away from this ‘limited’ availability productHow can you run out of a digital product?

And that’s it, this is the formula.

The last five minutes of the video is an extract of Mike’s podcast with Jenny Radcliffe, an independent consultant specialized in psychological elements of social engineering. Here‘s full podcast episode, I strongly encourage you to take a look.


Conclusions

Holy crap, it’s been another long trip!

I hope you took your anti-fake-guru vaccine today. Take your time, read this post, check the sources, watch the videos.

Maybe you already know 50-70% of the tactics exposed here. In my case, I learned a good 30-40% of new stuff, and I can spot and name patterns within seconds now.

It’d be great to make a recap of what you should be aware of here. Let’s try to keep it short:

  • Selling online digital products is great, but it’s also a territory for scammers, fake gurus, contrepreneurs.
  • If what they’re trying to sell you is “expensive” (I’d call expensive anything above 200 USD/EUR/Whatever), it probably isn’t worth. If it’s very expensive (above 1k) you should run away.
  • If they’re selling you a dream, run away.
  • If all their “free” material is not actionable, run away.
  • If there’s any sort of psychological manipulation, run away.
  • If you’re in a difficult moment in your life and feel vulnerable, don’t take any important spending decision, and just run away from expensive courses.
  • If the first contact with the fake guru is because of his products (via ads), run away.
  • If they didn’t get wealthy by what they teach, but because of teaching it, run away.
  • If you can’t find anything about their lives before they started selling the product, run away.

My personal bullshit bar goes even lower:

  • If they do affiliate marketing with crappy entities, unfollow.
  • If there’s a call to action in each of their post/video (subscribe, join my patreon, click on this link…), unfollow.

I’d go even further:

  • If money comes first for them, unfollow.

But RIP, you follow a lot of people! Do all of them meet your criteria?

That’s a good point.

No, not all of them. And I’m a victim of the same bias I’m recommending you to be aware of. Sunk Costs Fallacy. If I’ve committed a lot of time by following a person, it takes a lot of effort to admit that he/she’s not as good as I thought.

But I’m getting better at this. I’m slowly pruning my inflow πŸ™‚

That’s all for today!

I hope you enjoyed this post, it is made of exactly 7777 words πŸ™‚

Again, have a nice day!

 

36 comments

  1. Thank you for pingback! Your analysis is amazing, I remember the struggle writing that article about our common friend FM. It’s a shame that some people give away money so easily.

    1. Thank you for your testimony!
      What you documented about FM is exactly what TIMWWTM does in his Facebook group. It was good to see that it’s a scripted pattern and not anything of his own skills.

  2. He comes from one of the worst neighborhoods of Rome and writes lengthy posts… what are you trying to sell us??
    I was about to suggest you the classic book from Robert Cialdini, but you already know it.
    Thanks for your post, nice reading!

    1. Exactly! I’d be the PERFECT fake guru!
      Please, keep me accountable on this, save this post as pdf, because if I’d join the evil side I’ll rewrite my past as well πŸ™‚

        1. No, ancora non trovo questa cosa da nessuna parte.
          Ho aperto il tuo link originale con tre browsers differenti, anche in incognito e anche disabilitando uBlock Origin. Vedo sempre e solo una pagina vuota, senza alcun contenuto.
          Ho anche googlato “turnover EE…” e non ho trovato niente…

          Non ho idea da dove vengano quei numeri che riporti. Se per favore hai un qualche documento o uno screenshot sarei contento di dargli un occhio.

          1. Sono in ritardo, ma io la pagina la vedo (dopo il captcha).

            Non trovo il modo di allegare gli screenshot al mio messaggio, se vuoi te lo mando via email. Comunque i numeri riportati da Nicola sono corretti.

            Btw, per la serie “ci vogliamo rovinare”, il capitale Γ¨ 2500 euro.

            1. per favore mandami gli screenshot via mail.
              Io non vedo niente, neanche in incognito, neanche cambiando browser, neanche disabilitando tutte le estensioni.

              Non capisco perchΓ©.

  3. I was not really interested in reading this until.. I realized it is interesting πŸ™‚

    And what a good timing as my dad told me that my cousin recently invested 1000 euro in platincoin. After your post I realized this is mlm combined with some worthless crypto currency and live webinars.

    Just called my cousin today and told him to get the **** out.

      1. I bet you already know it, but maybe it could motivate your run πŸ™‚

        https://virace.app/runandwinterms/

        PS. I’m neither a swiss resident nor affiliated in any way with that competition, just going for a run with a friend of mine later today, he’s the one who told me about it… feel free to edit/reject the comment πŸ™‚

        Luca

  4. Oh Mr Rip, ti sei cacciato in un rabbit hole non da poco.

    Io ho avuta la fortuna (LOL) di vedere sti personaggi nascere, grazie a Facebook Periodo 2010-2012… riderai ancora di piu pensando che la maggior parte di tutto cio sia partito da un gruppo facebook sulla dieta Paleo. Ho provato anche io a combattere contro questi personaggi, sopratutto sul fake guru della Paleo (che risolve tutti i tuo problemi di salute, ti ricrescono i capelli e ti si allunga il pisello), visto che la si gioca con la salute delle persone. Ma come hai notato non si riesce a combattere, il dialogo per queste persone non puo esistere perche devono mostrare ai potenzali clienti (o polli) solo che il loro verbo Γ¨ legge e che chi Γ¨ contrario Γ¨ un fake / invidioso / incopetente. (trovi lo stesso pattern in tutti i β€œcompagni di FM”).

    Questi TIMWWTM, X, Y etc sono tutti stati creati a tavolino da FM, ognuno cn la sua nicchia (finanza, copywriting, paleodiet) e ognuno con materiale riciclato dall’america. Lo stesso FM ha iniziato coi concetti di Dan Kennedy e altri marchettari .

    Alla fine ho lasciato perchè di certo non si puo impiegare il proprio tempo in questa maniera, dispiace dirlo ma se le persone sono disposte a pagare questi personaggi è un problema loro. Anzi complimenti a loro che riescono ad abbindolare le persone e a convincerli a donargli i sudati guadagni. Io di certo non sarei capace di farlo, non credo riuscirei piu a guardare in faccia il mio umile padre della umile provincia della umile sardegna che ha fatto di tutto per farmi studiare (triplo lol).

    Purtroppo L’internet Γ¨ diventato una grossissima marketing machine, quasi ogni persona dietro un blog / sito ha il solo scopo di monetizzare. Per questo credo tu sia una perla rara dentro un’ostrica di merda πŸ˜€ (scusa per la poesia). Se vai a ben vedere anche nel mondo FIRE la maggior parte blogga per cercare di guadagnare, abbastanza triste a parer mio.

    In ultimo, forse potrei offrirmi volontario per la traduzione in italiano degli ultimi due post, credo faccia bene alla comunita italiana….anche se rimango scettico, chi casca nella rete di sti tipi non cerca notizie contrarie ma solo conferme (confirmation bias anyone?)

    Saluti

    1. Non penso che l’obiettivo di Mr Rip sia combattere qualcuno. Piuttosto divertirsi nell’esporre la varietΓ  del bestiario umano. Gli investimenti non sono molto diversi dalle diete. C’Γ¨ un approccio scientifico e uno dogmatico. Se sei interessato all’approccio scientifico sulle diete, ti consiglio di vedere il sito https://nutritionfacts.org/ del Dr. Greger (con podcast) o di vedere su Youtube alcuni video del Prof. Robert Lustig tipo ‘Sugar, metabolic syndrome, and cancer’. Alla fine anche per le diete, tutto si risolve in una strategia semplicissima basata su una dieta prevalentemente plant-based con poca carne e zuccheri raffinati. Praticamente le verdure stanno alla dieta come gli ETF a base larga agli investimenti e la carne come le azioni acquistate con i fun-money (vanno bene finchΓ© non si supera il 5-10% del totale).

      1. Si, in generale non ho molta voglia di continuare queste battaglie “contro”.

        Preferisco creare un’alternativa che renda quella monnezza visibilmente inferiore. Dal mio canto ho che sono decisamente meno affamato di TIMWWTM e degli altri come lui, visto che ho una discreta libertΓ  finanziaria, e posso offrire prodotti migliori a prezzi attorno allo ZERO πŸ™‚

        Ora perΓ² mi aspetta un mesetto di viaggi e visite a parenti, e poi torno a lavorare a Settembre… cercheremo di trovare il tempo πŸ™‚

    2. Hai centrato il problema: non si puΓ² discutere con i fake guru perchΓ© devono mantenere la loro immagine nei confronti dei loro adoratori, senza quella finiscono zampe all’aria in una settimana. Chi glielo continua a pagare il leasing sui Rolex?

      in ogni caso non sono cosΓ¬ intenzionato a proseguire queste battaglie contro i mulini a vento, alla fine la gente a cui sarebbe utile leggere un post come questo non lo troverΓ  mai. Invece si troverΓ  il faccione di TIMWWTM sponsorizzato su facebook e ci clicca. Vaglielo poi a spiegare che – grazie a due soffiate interne di acquirenti di LF – stanno perdendo soldi come pazzi investendo in aziende Italiane che falliscono e… rullo di tamburi… shotando il Nasdaq 3x leveraged.

      Yep, questo genio Γ¨ riuscito a chiudere il 2019 (anno da +30%) in perdita πŸ˜€

      1. ma infatti unico portafoglio in mia perdita, che Γ¨ stato il primo acquistato fidandomi del programma…

        ho fatto sempre investimenti ottimali, ma se ti facessi vedere l’account dedicato a quello LOL oggi che ho tutte le conoscenze… lo short 3x sul nasdaq “a copertura” fa ridere i polli e pensare che ci ho messo 900€ su quella cagata mi fa ridere ancora oggi

  5. Ciao Mr Rip.
    Sono un semplice ragazzo di 30 anni che grazie a Marcello Ascani, che ti ha citato su youtube ha iniziato a seguirti da oggi.
    Che dire, sei un fenomeno.

    Non solo i tuoi report sono estremanente accurati e TRASPARENTI, ma sei anche un esempio per la precisione che impieghi (fin troppa ahahah).

    Per quanto riguardo TIMWWTM… con degli articoli come questo verrai sicuramente indicizzato su Google, scrivo questo commento anche perchΓ¨ cosi Google capisca che questo post Γ¨ utile (qualcosa di siti ci capisco). A prescindere da tutto TIMWWTM diventa scam nel momento in cui si approccia insultando la gente.

    A me hanno insegnato che l’educazione conta, ma evidentemente quando “fai i soldi partendo dal basso” te ne freghi di tutto e di tutto, compreso delle regole di pagare le tasse in Italia visto che Γ¨ andato a Malta. Mai e poi mai mi affiderei a lui.

    Posso chiederti una cosa?
    Uno molto piΓΉ sereno (e con sede in Italia, tra l’altro Γ¨ di Reggio Emilia come me) Γ¨ RP. Anche lui vende corsi costosi eh, sia ben chiaro, sempre sulla finanza. Per caso lo conosci?

    In ogni caso, grazie per il lavoro che fai. Sei giΓ  stato salvato nei preferiti!

  6. Hi MrRIP,
    I’d like to know your opinion about ioinvesto.com.
    I started following these guys on their YT channel more than one year ago and so far I appreciated their videos on financial education, but recently they started proposing their courses… of course not for free.
    I mean, I don’t blame them if they want to monetize their job. But someway this is activating my “antisqualo” alarm warning light…

    1. I used to like their content in the past, it seems to me that they’re moving their steps into aggressive marketing and that’s beyond my ethical standard.

  7. Ciao Giorgio, ti faccio i miei più sinceri complimenti per i contenuti di questo Blog, ne ho trovati pochi così (forse uno soltanto in realtà, e guarda caso solo per via di conoscenze pregresse).
    Una volta c’erano i forum, si condivideva per il gusto di farlo (anche perchΓ¨ in pochi si fidavano di acquistare online), poi internet ha subito veloci trasformazioni con l’aumento esponenziale dei contenuti, e il calo dell’attenzione, la massificazione, e i social…e altro, le varie community sono diventate farm dove il marketer di turno cresce le proprie bestie da macello, e nel frattempo i forum si sono abbastanza spopolati, probabilmente anche per via di questo fenomeno, d’altra parte i gruppi a β€œpagamento” sono anche i piΓΉ sponsorizzati, che catalizzano la maggior parte degli interessati.

    Sarebbe bello trovare invece community fedeli ai principi della condivisione, e di scambio reciproco, tu ne consiglieresti qualcuna?

    1. Reddit Γ¨ ancora un bel luogo.
      Poi ci sono communities non male, come ad esempio finanzaonline in Italia, mustachianpost forum e englishforum in Svizzera.
      Sono communities piΓΉ “broad”, ma sono comunque bei post dell’internet πŸ™‚

  8. Innanzitutto ti faccio i complimenti per il tuo blog, interessantissimo. Ti ho scoperto solo ieri da un video visto per caso di Marcello Ascani e giΓ  sei un idolo. Ho giΓ  letto qualche articolo e penso che il tuo blog impegnerΓ  le mie serate d’ora in avanti.
    Il primo ringraziamento che ti voglio dare Γ¨ per il fatto che finalmente qualcuno mi ha spiegato perchΓ© cavolo le offerte di questi soggetti finivano sempre con 7! πŸ˜€

    Grazie per tutto quello che condividi.

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