David Omari was working a bunch of nine-to-fives. Macy’s, Sears, you name it. On his breaks, he was watching a lot of gamers, YouTubers. And he starts seeing how they’re all buying their dream car, their dream house.
So he was like, “Wait a minute, I play these games too. Maybe I need to try that.”
So he starts posting gaming content. Perfect ’cause he didn’t have to show his face or anything like that.
Ken and Anita Corsini have flipped more than 1,000 homes in the last 17 years. Which got ’em on HGTV shows like Flip or Flop Atlanta, Rock the Block, and, more recently, Flipping Showdown.
They’ve built a fun and profitable family-based real estate business in Red Barn Homes, and now they wanna help you do the same through their franchise opportunity, Red Barn Homebuyers.
Which they believe is the easiest and most direct way to win with real estate.
Inayah McMillan changed her whole life by doing rental arbitrage on Airbnb. That’s, of course, when you rent a home or an apartment from a landlord, and then with their approval, you list it on Airbnb.
It’s a great way to start if you’re broke, which Inayah was back then. She’d been pouring what little money she did have into all sorts of different side hustles and internet businesses. None of which were poppin’ off. So she used her personal credit to give this Airbnb thing a shot.
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.”
Suzie Agelopoulos created a six-figure Airbnb business, without owning any property, all while traveling the world.
Inside her course, The BNB Method, she wants to show you how to do the same.
Worth buying? What’s it cost? And what else should you know about Suzie?
Read every word of this review to find out.
“Before I started my business, I was working in a restaurant,” Suzie says. “I’m Greek, so I was kinda born into it. It was great, but just not for me. Felt like jail. I had to be there 24/7.”
Collin Mayne is a serial entrepreneur out of Canada. As a former fitness model and physique competitor, it’s no surprise his first business was online fitness training.
Then he got involved with a marketing agency.
And more recently, ecom. Walmart and Amazon automation, to be exact.
Before we get into that, here’s kind of a day in the life of Collin Mayne.
He’ll wake up about 5 a.m., try to avoid his phone for the first hour or so, journal, map out his day, stuff like that.
Bryson Blocker made $3 million in just six months, at 20 years old. But let’s go back to the beginning.
Bryson grew up in St. Louis, Missouri. Rough neighborhood. Dad was in jail. Mom was always hustling, trying to pay the bills. So a lot of the time, it was just Bryson and his Xbox.
Luckily, he makes it through school without getting into too much trouble.
Meets this chick, Inayah. Right away, they clicked, bonded over personal development, started dating.
Adam Cerra considers himself one of the top hight-ticket salespeople in the world.
He’s the creator of the Inverse Closer Academy, where he teaches other average, everyday people – like yourself – how to make bank doing high dollar phone sales.
Even if you’ve literally never sold a single thing in your life.
Ditch your boss. Snatch six figures a year. Work from anywhere, as long as you’ve got your phone and laptop handy.
Sam Jacobs came across dropshipping back in 2018. Immediately, he was a fish on a hook.
Wait, so I can build an online business from my laptop, and I never have to touch a product at all, he thought to himself. Yeah, count me in.
So he got to work. A month later, his first sale come in. Refreshed his Shopify stats and there it was: $37. Sam will never forget that moment. It was proof: holy crap, this actually works. If I can get one sale, I can get more. All-in he went.
Alicia Reynoso is the founder of Live Infinitely, an ecom brand that sells water bottles, fitness gear, health supplements, and more. She actually grew it to eight figures before successfully exiting.
Her secret sauce? Communities. Which gave her exposure and loyalty and allowed her to charge premium prices.
But let’s back up a little. They launched via Amazon FBA. Built that up slowly. Then added a Shopify store. Ran Facebook ads. Scaled it. Plateaued. Now what?
Calvin Curry is the founder of Authorify. “When you look at the way the world is going, especially with social media,” he says, “people are listening to people. They’re less loyal to brands, or even a big media company or a news outlet, than they were before.”
“And so what we do is help you create that authority in your community and in your marketplace,” he continues.
“As a small business owner, there is so much competition out there. For example, there are 1.5 million real estate agents today.”
Jonnell Atkins is the creator of Seven Figure Host, where she teaches you how she’s charging upwards of $1,000 a night on Airbnb.
Not that long ago, she was stuck at a depressing 9-to-5, with a crummy credit score, wondering if this was it. It wasn’t.
She discovered Airbnb, scaled to seven units, made $1.3 million in two years, quit her soul-sucking job, bought her mom a home, and, well, here we are.
Colton Lindsay has an agent attraction system that makes him 6-figures a month even if he doesn’t work.
Colton got into real estate in 2005, failed miserably, sold two homes a year.
Hired a coach, started selling 20 homes a year, then a couple years later, more than 75 a year.
Quite the improvement, but still, active income. So when he took three weeks off to go watch the World Cup, his pipeline became drier than the fiery pits of Hell.
KT Hustles, as he calls himself, says he’s got an Amazon store that profits about $100k per month. He started out buying name brand products from retailers like Bed Bath & Beyond and Walmart, listing ’em on Amazon at a markup, and then shipping the products out himself once someone ordered.
Even though he built that up to about $60k a month in sales, as you can imagine, it was nonstop work.
The writing was on the wall, right next to that mural of Kobe.
Nate Barger used to sling booger sugar till he got busted, did some time, got out, got his life together, then became a millionaire through real estate.
Then the last recession hit and he lost everything.
Then he BRRRR’d his way back to multimillionaire status.
Can his coaching program help you do the same? Nate sure thinks so.
“Our company, the BRRRR Invest Academy, has helped our students, in the first 17 months, add over $250 million to their net worth,” he says.