Global Success Club Review
by Daniel Scocco
I haven’t spent money on Internet marketing ebooks or membership sites for a long time (if I remember well the last one was Aaron Wall’s SEO Book!), but this month I forked out $97 to get access to a site. I am also planning to renew my subscription, so I figured some of our readers could be interested as well. But here’s is the whole story.

A couple of weeks ago a person approached me via email asking what advertising options I had available on my site. I told him I work mostly with banners, but that I was sold out at the time. Nevertheless I asked what product or service he wanted to advertise, so that I could see if it was a good fit. He replied saying it was a membership site called Global Success Club, and he sent me a guest account so that I could check it out.
I had seen that name around (even on some high profile sites like John Chow and Shoemoney), so I decided to check it out.
What I Didn’t Like
At first I wasn’t impressed at all.
The sales page looked like all those “get rich quick” and “work from home” products you have out there. On top of that there was a lot of hype in the sales copy. Things like “Make Six Figures In The Next 90 Days!” and “Absolutely Guaranteed!”. This is a big turn off for anyone who has been online for more than six months…
I had a free guest account, though, so I decided to login to the members area to understand what was going on inside. Here’s the screenshot of the Dashboard:

As you can see the first menu item is called “Business Center”. Inside it you’ll basically find material to become an affiliate of the program, so that you can refer others and earn a commission by doing it. That is pretty much how the “money marking” part of the program works.
I am not a fan of such programs, but there was one thing useful there if you are just getting started with Internet marketing. It’s called “90 Days to $100k Per Year Program”. It’s a step-by-step program, where every day you’ll have a set of actions and tasks to perform.
I checked the tasks for the first few days, and it seems that if you follow all the 90 days you’ll leave a good foundation for how to promote things online (they focus on promoting their own program, but you can use it for anything else you like). But then again, nothing revolutionary here, so if you have been working online for some time you won’t find this very useful.
What I Liked A Lot
So far nothing special, and if this was everything available for members I sure wouldn’t recommend it for anyone else, especially because it costs $97 per month. But then I went on to check the second menu item, called “Training Center”.

Inside it I found two pretty valuable sections. One is called “Business and Internet Marketing Center”, where you’ll find a bunch of Internet marketing videos (e.g., Email Marketing, Facebook Traffic, PPC Traffic), interviews with successful Internet marketers (e.g., Frank Kern, Chris Brogan, Eben Pagan, John Reese, Jeff Walker), and a couple of complete Internet marketing seminars, including one from Mike Filsaime that had a cost of $5000 when he run it a couple of years ago.
Things were getting better, and at this point I already thought the site was worth the $97 just for the training material you would get.
The second section inside the “Training Center” was called “Success Coaching”, and there you’ll find two complete programs with Tony Robbins (a very famous motivational speaker), and a section called “Top Speakers”, with seminars from a dozen more motivational and success speakers.
I went straight to the “Top Speakers” section, and I was blown away by the first video, from a guy called Les Brown. The video is about living your life fully and reaching your goals. While I was never a fan of “The Secret” type of stuff, this time around it made a lot of sense to me, and in fact I ended up watching the video twice. I liked it so much that I asked a manager of the site if I could give this video as a freebie to my readers, and he agreed. Here’s the link for you to watch it (no strings attached, not even an email address is required. Just click and watch).
After that I started watching the other videos inside that section. It became a habit to wake up and start watching one of them as I had breakfast. Then one day I was getting ready to start my morning ritual when my login didn’t work. My guest account had expired…
That’s when I went to the homepage again and I signed-up for a normal account. They offer a free trial for seven days, and after that you start paying $97 per month if you want to retain access to the site. My free trial expired and I paid the $97 gladly to keep watching the videos. I am halfway through them right now, so I think I’ll pay for another month.
What Else Is Included?
The other stuff included in the membership site I just glanced over. There’s a forum where members can ask questions, there are occasional contests with prizes for members who refer more people to the site, and there are some live webinars as well from what I understood. I was mainly interested in the training videos, though, so I didn’t pay much attention to those other sections.
Global Success Club: Worth it?
Here’s my take on the program: the hype they use to sell the program and the “money making” part didn’t impress me that much. As I said above it’s basically a referral program where you earn commissions by referring new members.
The videos inside the “Training Center”, however, make the site well worth the money in my opinion. I went to research online and I found another website offering those seminars and videos, and the cost was $97 per seminar. Inside Global Success Club you’ll get over 20 of them for the same price.
As I said there’s a 7-day trial for $1, so you can check it out and decide for yourself. Here’s the link to sign-up for the free trial.
If you have questions about the program let me know in a comment below and I’ll address them.
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I’m like anyone and hate it when people get my company mixed up with others. My least favorite was when someone was claiming on RipoffReport that I owned some site I don’t own and have never been associated with, and posted my name, address and phone number in their complaint. I was happy that it was my previous contact information, but still steamed to be incorrectly associated with the company they were having trouble with. That I did because it’s visible, even if not associated with a site of mine.
Excellent suggestion. I think this applies to making comments on blogs, as well. If you don’t like what the blogger writes, the best thing is to stop visiting the blog. Contradicting and correcting other bloggers is mostly about ego and is a waste of time. Thanks for the tip!
I don’t really get this type of email, but I do agree that its a waste of time replying.
However, you could set up some canned responses in Gmail pretty easily, and I think you can even automate them for certain filters. For example, you could filter any that mention credit card charges and automatically send them that email you wrote.
I think this would be particularly useful for bloggers that receive a lot of complimentary emails, because as a reader, it takes extra effort to send the email and not getting any response from a “favorite blogger” can be disheartening.
yes, I just woke up this morning to 40 spam comments on my blog. Drives me mad. your immediate thought is “wow that ‘s a lot of comments” and are just as quickly put right back in your place when you realise each one tells you how great your blog is but doesn’t explain why…
Still, visitors to my blog are thin on the ground so at least someone (even an automated system!) is looking.
I think it is best to just ignore such email because it might just be a scam to trick for a reply. In some cases, they just spam every emails or website they can find just for a response. Base on the response or reply, they will try to check if any of them worth follow up for a scam. I normally categorize these email together with the scam emails which asking for verification of bank account, PayPal, ebay and any accusation they proclaim.