Saddlebrook Ecommerce Review

Mack Helmet

Mack McKaughan seems like a pork chops, baked potato, corn, and dinner roll kinda guy. Might even wash it down with a cold beer.

Sundays are for God and God’s favorite team: the Dallas Cowboys.

Or, who knows, maybe he’s a big sushi eater who watches tennis and drinks wine coolers. You never know.

Either way, Mack is the one doing the marketing and selling for Saddlebrook Ecommerce, which was founded by a fancier-looking fellow named Stuart Simonsen out of Billings, Montana.

Want the scoop on their offer? Cool. 

Read on for Saddlebrook Ecommerce reviews.

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Mack was a client of Saddlebrook before he became their pitchman.

They built him three Shopify stores using their P5 Ecom Scaling Framework, which made him four figures on his very first payout.

This same framework allowed clients like Sandy to 10x her initial investment and Ron to earn multiple five figures a month during his early retirement.

Mack understands your situation:

  • The stock market is too risky and takes too long to see an ROI.
  • Real estate is saturated, and interest rates are higher than where I score on the autism spectrum.
  • As for other investments, you don’t have the time or patience to look into them.

So what’s the solution?

Well, if you ask Mack, it’s buying a done-for-you ecom store from Saddlebrook Ecommerce.

Here’s how it works:

  1. You become a 50/50 partner in an ecommerce brand.
  2. They start researching and testing products to lay the foundation.
  3. Once they’ve got winning products, they continue building out the brand.
  4. Then they switch their focus to long-term scalability, predictability, and ROI.
  5. There’s an option to exit at a seven-figure valuation during the “golden pocket” phase.

You can connect with the operations team at any time and get consistent updates on the growth of the business, Mack says.

He doesn’t specify the cost, but in a follow-up email, it states it’s a one-time five-figure investment.

Probably $20,000 to $30,000, if not more.

Beyond that, though, there’s nothing else you would have to pay for.

If true, that does set it apart from other ecom automation services, which typically ask you to bankroll the inventory and ad spend as well.

Stuart Dressed Up
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Mack walks through a couple of case studies:

  • My Vexie sells “peach perfect” shapewear like butt lifter shorts and bodysuits. The store supposedly did $98,000 in sales in a single month.
  • Voozee sells clothing and travel care for pets, allegedly crossing $174,000 in sales in one month.

Hmm. While both stores look pretty legit, they’re showing little to no traffic these days.

Mack tells us not to worry. Saddlebrook Ecommerce clients are definitely getting great results.

Why?

Because their model’s crafted and executed by world-class experts who’ve really put in the reps to master this stuff over the years.

That being said…

These stores are super labor-intensive, so Saddlebrook can only work with so many people at once.

For that reason, you shouldn’t sleep on booking your demo call, Mack warns.

Hesitant?

What if Mack told you they’ve got a No Questions Asked Buy Back Guarantee after 12 months if you’re not satisfied? Would that put you over the edge?

For me, no, it wouldn’t.

Too many unanswered questions.

For example:

  • Why do we not hear a peep from Stuart Simonsen?
  • How come Mack didn’t just order more stores instead of taking a job at the company?
  • And the most obvious of all: Why doesn’t Saddlebrook replicate and scale their own stores and keep all the profit?

I’m not saying these guys are up to no good, but the FTC has sued and shut down dozens of offers like this that sound too good to be true.

Like stepping onto an escalator with your suitcase and carry-on, be careful.

Why Most Courses Suck