Yep you read that right.
Foundr has a course from the co-founder of BigCommerce, Mitchell Harper. The guy's worth around $127 million, very successful and obviously knows his stuff.
The course is called '60 day startup' and promises to get you your first 100 customers in 2 months, $1 million revenue in a year, etc. It covers every stage of a tech startup's journey, the mistakes Mitchell Harper made and how I can avoid them, etc.
Now this isn't a scam because if you look on glassdoor & trustpilot, and see the people Foundr has interviewed, they are obviously very trustworthy and highly respected.
But $2000 is all my savings. Im 18 and I don't have much in savings obviously. However, if the information I get is really as good as they make it seem... I think I'd be willing to pay for it.
There's also a 4 month incremental payment, smth like $579 a month for 4 months.
Do you guys think I should buy this course? I know there are existing books/free courses on startups e.g. 'The Startup Owner's Manual'... but they're all really general & their info isn't all relevant to what I'm trying to do. The Foundr course is specific to TECH STARTUPS - which is exactly the type of startup I'm trying to start. Literally all the information, I think, will be relevant and useful for me - and also from someone who's very credible.
Furthermore, I think that it would be extremely time-efficient to have someone like Mitchell Harper condense all of his learnings & strategies into a single course, and not have to sift through dozens of books, trying to determine what info is relevant to creating a tech startup and what is not.
What do you guys think?
EDIT: There is a 365 day moneyback guarantee. But they say that you need to show them proof that you've completed all the assignments, tried the strategies they've suggested, etc. and only if the course fails to get results, will they refund you.
EDIT #2: Sorry guys, I forgot about how popular dropshipping is right now. I'm not dropshipping, I'm trying to create a SaaS. The course is for tech startups, i.e. "SaaS, mobile apps, web platforms"
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