Is Niche Profit Classroom A Scam?

In today’s Niche Profit Classroom Review I want to shed some light on the legitimacy and value of the NPC internet marketing course. More specifically, I aim to answer the question: is niche profit classroom a scam?

In case you are not familiar with it, Niche Profit Classroom or NPC for short is an internet marketing training course which provides training videos, some basic tools, and packages of ready-made business, aka niches. The owner of the platform is Adam Short (no idea if it’s a pen name or something like that).

Is Niche Profit Classroom A Scam

Being a person who has been around the online world for many years now trying to find a way to make money online, I have come across Niche Profit Classroom numerous times in the past. I have considered buying it and ended up frustrated due to the many upsells and the high price tag

So, what does Niche Profit Classroom Provide?

There is a lot of training provided in the form of small videos on the subject of creating products and selling other people’s products online. The main problem is that a big portion of the training is somewhat outdated. The second biggest concern I have with it is the so-called ready-made businesses. Whenever I hear the term ready-made online I know it’s time to run. It’s basically an outdated marketing gimmick, but I’ll talk more about that later.

To start with, there are some things I do like about Niche Profit Classroom. First of all, the method taught is sound and used by many people online to make a living. I’m talking about affiliate marketing, of course. I personally use affiliate marketing to make money online and I can testify that it is a completely legit way.

I also have to state that there is a good volume of information available to study through the videos. Also, the forum seems to be active, which is always a good sign. All in all, a complete newbie in internet and affiliate marketing will get benefit from the videos. Not to say it’s the most optimal way, but it’s a feasible one.

Now, on to my main concerns.

Internet Guruism

I used to love those sales pages in the past. Pools, supercars, mansions and luxury travel. All from the comfort of your laptop and only some clicks away. It’s what most internet marketing self-proclaimed “gurus” use to sell more. Now I mostly hate them. They are full of empty promises and hold no ground to the reality of internet business.

While Adam bashes the other gurus in most of his sales copy, he fails to do anything different. He also shows his luxurious laptop lifestyle and he also promises guaranteed easy riches with the use of his system. Not to mention the fact that he uses ready-made businesses as a way to make you buy. Who doesn’t want a ready-made business that spews money with minimal work form you? Bullshit I say.Niche Profit Classroom Sales Page
He even states he is a former Yahoo insider and he has leaked best-kept secrets to unlimited online wealth! Come on, this is not 2000! Dishonest marketing and made-up or altered facts that aim to make you feel you are part of an inner society. Bullshit! The way to make money online isn’t secret. It’s quite simple really. You just need to apply hard work and focus on the right methods while ignoring shiny objects. Also, being in it for the long term. Quick riches don’t exist. Nothing more, nothing less.

One more thing that threw me off is that they use the classic marketing trick of limited availability. When you visit the website it seems like the spots have run out. (Who has spots for an online course? Have they run out of chairs or something? :P) What you have to do is submit your e-mail (building a list anyone?) to be notified of the new spots. What happens then is they start to presell you with a classic e-mail sequence and at the end ask you to buy for a “limited time only”. Bullshit once again. They just want to make you feel like you are getting in on something premium. Beautiful marketing, yes. For my tastes though dishonest and outdated. Those tricks are becoming more and more evident to people. Also, I believe Adam does that in order to move people over to his new high-priced course, Niche Profit Full Control, but I plan to talk about this one on a separate post down the road.

Upsells

From the moment you purchase the product, Adam starts bombarding you with upsell after upsell. I hate this method for two reasons. Firstly, why asking me to buy something when I haven’t even looked at your main product? I don’t even trust you yet. Secondly, why have upsells to start with? Shouldn’t your main product cover my needs? If not, why did I buy it and didn’t know the need for something else from the start? Bad marketing and bad ethics in my opinion.

One of the upsells are the ready-made businesses, so let’s talk about why I hate them.

Ready-Made Businesses

First and foremost, they promote the mindset that someone can make money online quickly. This shouldn’t be your mindset towards internet marketing when starting out and it will ultimately lead you to frustration and failure. You should look at this as a serious business and commitment in order to become successful.

The second reason I dislike the whole idea of ready-made businesses is the fact that this is a bad way for you to learn. You can’t become better at something if someone else does it for you. This way you will always be dependent on the person who built the website for you and you won’t gain any skills yourself. The old adage holds true here as well. Give a man a fish, feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime.

Last but not least, I dislike ready-made websites because of the fact that typically they are low-quality ones. Those guys use PLR articles to provide content for your website. John Chow does a good introduction to PLR articles and possible uses for them here. Just ignore the advice on backlinking since the article is from 2009 :P. PLR articles are almost worthless for the search engines since Google only values original content. To top it all off, those niche ideas are sent to a lot of members each time, which makes it possible for more than one person to pursue the same niche using the same ready-made website! Well, that would be funny!

Be sure to check the following video as well of a former member that invested and had nothing in return. I don’t know the guy, just found the video during my research and thought it was interesting to include.

Training

The training of the course consists of short videos that feature slideshows. The bad thing about them is that they don’t actually show you what to do. This is quite bad when teaching someone a new skill. You can learn more easily and be able to apply your knowledge better when you see someone doing it in front of you. That’s why over the shoulder videos are a lot better for teaching.

Here they give you what to do but not how to do it. The information itself isn’t something groundbreaking and most people who have been online at some time won’t find much value. As for the newbies out there, the info is not bad.

Stagnation

Niche Profit Classroom is not an evolving training platform. And that is a huge problem with online marketing. The online world is evolving by the minute. You can’t expect to make some training and leave it at that. You have to update it as time goes by and that is not the case with NPC.

Most online courses that I have come across (Niche Profit Classroom included) still have some pretty outdated training about backlinking. They still promote posting to article directories, a method which nowadays will even hurt your websites instead of helping them.

is niche profit classroom a scam?

Verdict

All in all, the training of Niche Profit Classroom is not the worst, but it’s not ideal for a newbie. They would learn new stuff, but they would have difficulty actually implementing what they learn.

For advanced people, almost nothing inside the NPC training will prove to be something they didn’t know. The question remains, is Niche Profit Classroom worth the 67$ per month fee? When most of the info is either basic or outdated and when there are other platforms that provide better training and a complete package of tools to build your online businesses at a much lower monthly fee, not at all!

Add the fact that I dislike the whole mentality of getting rich quick and self-proclaimed internet “gurus” showing off their supposed supercars, mansions, and pools, and I believe you understand that I don’t really endorse Niche Profit Classroom. I wouldn’t say they are a flat out scam, but they are borderline on the scam metrics.

What do I recommend?

I have talked about the Wealthy Affiliate platform before. It’s the place that I learned how to make money online and where I keep myself continually educated on the field. I also host my websites over there and love it. It’s the best place for newbies to start learning how to build income producing websites and I recommend them more than any other platform online. It’s also the best place for advanced marketers to take their internet marketing to the next level. Be sure to check my detailed review of the platform.

==>Check my detailed review of the Wealthy Affiliate platform here<==

Also, be sure to take a look at my personal journey in making money online.

==>My personal journey in making money online<==

I hope you found today’s Niche Profit Classroom review helpful. Over to you. Is Niche Profit Classroom A Scam? I would love your feedback and experiences with the platform in the past. Share in the comment section below.

In addition, If you enjoyed today’s review I would love it if you shared it using the buttons below.

Thanks, everyone and I’ll see you next time!

Tony,

Founder of Lifestyle Freedom Business

2 thoughts on “Is Niche Profit Classroom A Scam?”

  1. Hey Tony,

    Thanks for shedding light on Niche Profit Classroom! Your breakdown really helps folks like me understand what’s under the hood.

    I’m with you on steering clear of those shiny promises and empty pools of internet guruism. It’s refreshing to hear someone cut through the noise and speak straight.

    I’m also a big fan of Wealthy Affiliate—it’s been my go-to for learning the ropes of online business. Have you checked out Affiliorama yet? If not, I’d be curious to hear your take.

    Cheers!

    Reply

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