Overall Rating 




Manufacturer
Whitney Information Network, Inc.
Product Description
Promoted by the Rice twins.
Average Retail Value
$39.95 (prices may vary)
Comparisons
N/A





3/29/2007 - Foonshaw of Texas, USA writes:
Attended the free workshop, the lady didnt say anything about Real Estate investing, she talkd so much about the economy, Graduated the 3day training seminar, was advised the best way to start investing in Real Estate was to "create cash" by assigning contracts on junk properties to richer investors/ Rehabbers. What they taught in theory was very attractive but in the REAL WORLD of 2+2 = 4, its all a bunch of garbage. If it was that simple or easy, everybody would be doing it!! Whenever you see them on TV please change the channel and make yourself happy because the Devil employer you know is far better than the Angel (infomercial) that you dont know.





2/17/2007 - Cristina of Ohio, USA writes:
I attended a free seminar & was sold a $200 pkg of sample forms and a guide plus a 3 day training, that was suppose to cover everything I will need to know to succeed. @ the 3 day trng all I got was little pointers and a sales pitch to buy the adv.prgm for $9K-$43K. The best part is that our host, a real estatemogal when looked up on the WWW history reads that he worked for Lifescience Marketing making $250,000 in kick backs,he then left and went to AMC also doing marketing and it listed him as a convincing sales rep making 25K per mo. Which is true, he cantalk a heck of a game.he has done this for 25 years. I dont think that I can actually do anything with what I was promised. And if the program works so darn well, why don't they have the faith and finance it in payment.





1/30/2007 - Steve of Florida, USA writes:
3 days of live training not scheduled or disclosed. P. 21 of Wholesale/Retail refers to audio tapes where none were included. Wholesale flipping concept flawed – predicated on finding CASH Buyer within a few days. Not feasible, subject to loss of deposits/$$$. P. 34 Retailing Houses: Owner Finance – concept does not mention possible ONLY IF you can qualify plus your residence. Not Feasible and states “other ways we will not discuss”. P. 38 Raise More Capital: does not discuss how this is possible and correctly suggests “plan for the worst” ! P2, Q: What You Will Need To Know To Do Business – 5 questions with no answers, incomplete, no instruction, too basic. P. 34 Q: How Does Constructing No Qualifying Financing Tie In With Lease Option? – answer given – “If construction No Qualifying Financing is all you know you’ll miss a large portion of income from lack of ability”. No Sh**t! no further instruction, incomplete.





1/11/2007 - Tisha of Texas, USA writes:
I attended a "free" seminar in Fort Worth, Texas. They really do have good "sales people"! They talk about all the millions they make and give you just enough information to make you interested then all of a sudden they hit you with the sales pitch that to learn more you have to pay $999 TODAY! for a 3 day class to teach you everything! You should have seen how many people got up an left, including myself.





1/15/2006 - David of Delaware, USA writes:
Here's how it works. The infomercial’s goal is to get you to one of the free area seminars listed. The high-powered speakers at the seminar imply they've made millions by buying low-cost "ugly" properties that can be leveraged against other properties. Lots of photos, lots of success stories, lots of sunshine pumped by skillful presenters. The concept sounds great and has no doubt worked for some. Where it gets expensive are the follow up meetings for those deemed likely to succeed, according to a survey everyone fills out. The cost of the follow-up seminar was $1,500. That leads to another seminar costing about $8,000, which I refused, but did buy a $2,000 package of forms. For several months I received calls offering a private mentor for another $12,000. The bottom line is when you see infomercials or other ads offering free investment advice of any kind, be prepared for a pitch, and tread carefully. These folks are very sophisticated salespersons.
