Scott Barrie is the founder and CEO of We Do Ecom For You. His business partner is Collin Mayne. Obviously, they offer ecommerce automation stores.
“We provide everything A to Z for you,” Scott says. “We do the business research, the product uploads, order fulfillment, customer service, and so on. So basically, what you get from us is a fully automated business that takes away none of your time.”
Is it legit? Read this entire review to find out.
“This allows you to take advantage of a passive income while not taking away from your lifestyle,” Scott continues. “Whether you wanna travel with friends, spend time with your family, or focus on other ventures you’ve got going (or would like to start).”
“On average, our clients make six-figures per year, completely passive. Their only responsibility is to put up the funding for the products and of course the store. Book a call with our team at WeDoEcom4U.com if you’d like to learn more.”
They don’t say what it costs on their website. I’m guessing it’s $30k or more, just based on all the other Amazon and Walmart automation offers I’ve reviewed. Then you’ll want as much open credit as possible. Then they’ll take 50% of the net profit each month as well.
Plan on it taking about three months to get your store up and running. It could take a year or more to break even, and that’s assuming you do.
After that, you could be looking at $7,500 to $15,000 per month, take-home, if nothing goes wrong.
So what could go wrong? They could intentionally or accidentally violate Amazon or Walmart’s terms of service. If that happens, your store would get shut down, you would be banned from selling in the future, and any money you’ve already made that hasn’t been paid out yet could be held indefinitely.
Generally, these automation companies will try to find a workaround, somehow getting you a new store to replace the old one, but even if they do, now you’re starting over from scratch.
Not likely, but it does happen.
Other than that, Scott and Collin seem like good dudes. Though it’s hard for me to picture them being the type to sit behind a computer all day, geeking out on this ecom stuff. Or managing a huge team from the gym or the beach, which they always seem to be at. Ya know?
It’s just, something feels a little off here. I can’t quite put my finger on it. Their site hardly has any information. They’ve got one video montage of testimonials, but it’s only a handful of people who offer no specifics about the results they’ve gotten.
Nonetheless, here’s what Scott had to say about ROI expectations.
“These stores have a scale up period of about six months. So what I mean by that is, when we’re first getting your store up and going, we’re gonna start small. Walk before we run. But once scaled, your return on your investment should be 20-40% per month. And the investment that I’m referring to is the amount of money you’re willing and able to spend on products that we can sell [in other words, not counting their huge upfront fee].”
“The more budget you have for products,” he explains, “the more sales that your store is gonna make. These products are gonna be bought with credit. But you’re only purchasing the product after the sale has been made. [Wait, so they’re doing dropshipping on Amazon? Yikes. Pretty sure that’s not allowed anymore. So refer back to what I said earlier about getting your account shut down.]”
“We recommend you have at least $5,000 in available credit to start.”
Man, too many red flags for me.