Chi Ta has made over $10 million dollars on Airbnb. Now some of his students are doing the exact same thing.
For example, Greg, who launched his Airbnb business during the thick of the pandemic, and still somehow brought in over $900k worth of bookings in his first year.
Or Derek, who added $10k a month in revenue after working with Chi for just a month. He’s currently doing about $170k a month on Airbnb.
Good for them, right? Why should you believe this’ll work for you?
Zach Lemaster started investing in real estate while working as an eye doctor and serving as a captain in the U.S. Air Force.
He built a successful business in wholesaling, flipping, and property management, which allowed him to retire early from his medical career.
Zach’s got a heavy portfolio of rental properties across multiple markets, including single-family homes, multifamily units, commercial spaces, and new constructions.
Dude’s dripping in credentials like a guido soaked in extra-virgin olive oil.
But is his program any good?
Devour every word of this Rent To Retirement Academy review to find out.
Slap a white coat on Frank Hepworth and he looks more like Doogie Howser than Neil Patrick Harris himself.
Normally, when a random guy pops up in my timeline promising crypto riches, I keep scrolling. I keep inhaling Ritz Bits Cracker Sandwiches with Cheese while checking out something less scammy.
But Frank claims to be a regulatory lawyer who worked at Canada’s top law firm, specializing in Digital Assets.
Then he 11x’d his crypto portfolio and retired after the last bull run.
Sean Ferres calls himself “The Gmail Maverick” and somehow manages to keep a straight face. He says he’s a Forbes-featured copywriter who’s done $200 million in client email sales.
Now he teaches people how to get rich writing emails.
Wonder where he finds the time. Between traveling and selfies and groping Buns McGee, he seems like a pretty busy guy.
For real, though.
Bae got a bird bath behind her. If they ever visit Buenos Aires, they’ll hafta rename the country Largentina. If Dora explored that ass, she’d surely get lost and need helicoptered out.
Kendall Shaw is one of the founders of Ecom PhD, an online university that teaches students from around the world how to build a six or even seven figure lifestyle business through ecommerce.
Kendall got into digital marketing when he was like 13 or 14.
Then he sees Tai Lopez’s infamous Here in my garage ad, signs up for his SMMA course, actually gets some clients but struggles to deliver on the leads he had promised them.
Leah Kay Hyder – formerly Leah Kay Krabbenhoft, until Matt swooped in like a seagull on a boardwalk french fry – loves letting you know just how fabulous she is.
She zips around in an R8, skis the finest slopes, swings Louis V bags like they’re Target sacks, and bounces from beaches to mountains to Tokyo while the rest of us debate splurging on guac at Chipotle.
Skrrt skrrt!
She built a multimillion-dollar ecom brand called Soulvation Society, selling hair ties, headbands, scrunchies, combs, beanies, and now even some clothes, because why the fuck not?
Jeremy R Russell was blessed with nice, thick hair. I bet he can hardly get a comb through it after he showers. Barber probably charges him double, huh?
Look, if you’ve been having wet dreams about green candles, Jeremy created 20-Minute Trader for you.
Everybody wants to click buy and sell, and turn a little money into a lot. But there’s a dizzying amount of experts to listen to, and strategies to try. And you only have so much time and capital, right?
Knowing what to do’s like trying to decipher the lyrics from “Bawitdaba” by Kid Rock. Until now, that is.
Adam Chapman calls himself the Home Service King. Instead of a crown and sash, he dons flannels and beaters and flaunts hipster tattoos to complete the “cool without trying” look.
Adam’s the founder of Pad Pal which has done over $5 million in home services.
He’s also the founder of Home Service University, where he teaches you how to build a home service business that makes at least $10,000 per month, in 90 days or less, guaranteed.
Tim David steps on stage looking like corn on the cob slathered in butter. Big ups to his tailor, and props to Brooks Brothers for the drip.
Tim claims he can help you land paid speaking gigs in the corporate market even if you don’t have a corporate-sounding topic and nobody knows you exist.
The fact that you even want to do this is impressive.
I’d rather die a horrible death in front of a large, judgy crowd – who’d all collectively agree, “Yep, went out like a total bitch” – than get up there and actually say words to them.