Matt and Liz Raad seem like the type of couple that would coparent the hell out of some cats.
They’ve been selling make-money-online programs since approximately the AOL dialup days.
They say they’re recognized as Australian experts in buying, renovating, and flipping profitable websites and businesses.
Same! Only, I’m in America and my expertise involves pissing away my hard-earned money on DraftKings. Shrugs shoulders.
Anyways.
What are they trying to sell us? Let’s get into the thorny details of their pitch, shall we?
Read on for my eBusiness Institute review.
Matt and Liz’s Australian accents are thicker than your mom’s mashed potatoes.
They wanna show you how to buy, improve, and grow websites for big cash flow – and even bigger exits.
Many eBusiness Institute students have already built six- and seven-figure businesses.
- Mark quit his boring job as a chemistry professor and reached $20k per month with a $500,000 portfolio of digital assets in under a year.
- Nathan and Alexa were sucky real estate investors. Now, instead of rehabbing houses, they rehab small hobby sites. This supposedly makes them $8k a month working only eight hours a year.
- Lisa, a stay-at-home mom with zero online experience, bought a website for $2,000, spruced it up, and got it to $5k a month – passively. Today? It does as much as $27,000 per month.
As for Matt and Liz?
They were zoologists who got into mergers and acquisitions, then went, “Wait, what’s this internet thing?”
$20 million in net worth later, here we are.
So yeah.
Ready to be primed for simple, safe digital income? Cool, just lend them your eyes, ears, and go ahead, empty your wallet while you’re at it.
eBusiness Institute: The Digital Investors Program costs $3,500 AUD upfront or five monthly payments of $895 AUD, which is roughly $2,152 USD if you pay in full or $550 per month on the installment plan.
Then you’ll need extra capital to acquire websites.
You can start small – maybe snag one for $1,000 or so. But some members have dropped as much as $50,000 on a single site.
I’ll pass on that second number.
Like when my niece asked for Adele tickets, and I Googled ’em: $2,770 apiece?! HELLO FROM THE FUU-TOOONNN!
But say you join.
You learn where to shop for websites, how to value them, negotiate, make the purchase, and take the reins.
Great. Now what? How does it actually make money?
According to Liz, the answer is display ads and affiliate links.
Once you’ve optimized those, you’ll need to fix any errors on the site, make it look pretty, update old content, add fresh content, and maybe build some backlinks.
Don’t worry, you can outsource all of that.
From there, you just rinse and repeat.
Soon, you’ve got three, four, five websites spitting out $5k, $10k, even $20k a month – while you, I dunno, box kangaroos in the Outback?
If all goes well, that money rolls in every month with minimal effort on your part. Maybe you pay a freelance writer or two, but that’s about it.
And if you ever need a bunch of cash all at once – to buy a new car or throw down on a house or something – you can sell any of the sites for between one and three years’ worth of profit.
Shhh… do you hear that?
That’s the Pirellis on your new Porsche screeching like a banshee as you corner too fast.
Actually, wait.
Are the Raads overselling this? Are you too late? Was this a killer model five years, before social media and AI started making websites feel less relevant?
What’s the word on the web?
Trustpilot has one lonely 5-star review from 2020, which in internet years might as well be 1920.
Nothing on the BBB.
Reddit? Just a few clowns swapping bootleg downloads of the course.
Hmm.
The lack of buzz makes the whole thing feel… well, barren. Like a ghost town, with tumbleweeds blowing through what was once a thriving frontier.
Tap below to see how we whip up new sites from scratch and rent them out to local businesses.