The review process described below has been in effect on eBiz Facts since April 2021. Reviews published before April 2021 followed a different process.
🧐 What is an MMO course?
MMO = Make Money Online.
An MMO course is any online training that claims to help you make money online.
For example…
🎯 The Goal
The goal of our review process is to ensure that the overall rating displayed for each MMO course is fair and accurate.
Fair and accurate ratings help our readers make better informed decisions about which courses to trust and which to avoid.
There are three parts to our review process…
- Editorial Review
- Student Reviews
- Overall Rating
Editorial Review
Here we evaluate each course based on factors such as…
- Refund policy
- Hidden costs
- Frequency of updates
- How the course is marketed
- How comprehensive it is
- Fixed cost or recurring?
Each evaluation converts to a number, which plugs into our proprietary algorithm to calculate the editorial review score for the course (sometimes referred to as the expert rating).
Not all evaluation factors have the same impact on the editorial review score.
For example, the refund policy of the course is given more weight than whether or not there are subtitles on the training videos.
Student Reviews
Here we accept ratings and reviews from students of the course.
Our review form (example) is essentially a survey about their experience with the training.
Each answered question becomes a data point which we feed into our proprietary algorithm. This is combined with a trust score that we calculate for each reviewer.
Ultimately we crunch the numbers on all the submitted student ratings (and their trust scores) to arrive at a weighted average student rating.
Overall Rating
The overall rating displayed for each course is determined by combining our editorial review score with the weighted average student rating.
As we publish more student reviews above a certain trust threshold, our editorial review score has less influence on the overall rating.
Ultimately student reviews have the biggest impact on the overall rating, since students know best how good (or bad) a course is.
🤔 Frequently Asked Questions
How often do you update your reviews?
It depends.
We aim to update the overall rating of each reviewed course every 1-2 months.
As for the editorial review of each course, a few things can trigger an update…
- Feedback from the course creator
- Feedback from students
- A significant update to the course itself
- Our regular fact-check of the review content
How do affiliate links work in the reviews?
For every course we review, we apply to be an affiliate (if an affiliate program exists).
If approved, the main call-to-action (CTA) on the review becomes an affiliate link to the course.
For example…
If we are not approved or no affiliate program exists, the main CTA becomes a link to view alternative courses…
This provides an incentive for each course creator to establish and maintain an affiliate partnership with us: such a partnership results in more students flowing their way.
However, whether or not we are an affiliate for a course has no impact on that course’s rating. We evaluate each course using the same process, regardless of partnerships.
Often this will result in us earning far less money than we could otherwise.
And we’re totally okay with that.
In the long run, we’re confident that things will work out financially so long as we do our best to review each course accurately and fairly and never lead our readers astray.
What if you get something wrong?
Despite our strict review process, sometimes we do make a mistake and publish inaccurate info about a course.
We’re only human, after all 🤷♂️
But we make every effort to ensure that such mistakes are found and fixed ASAP.
A few ways we accomplish this…
- We email a link to our editorial review to the course creator as soon as we publish, asking if they have any feedback or corrections.
- We quickly update the review and rating if the course creator provides compelling evidence that we made a mistake.
- If the issue is more a difference of opinion with the course creator, we offer to quote them in the review so they can have their say.
- We search online for students of the training and invite them to leave an honest review. We also ask the course creator to send students our way. If the feedback from those students conflicts with our findings, we investigate further and update the editorial review as needed.
Unfortunately, some course creators find all the above to be insufficient, and simply threaten us with legal action if they don’t like our review 😱
For example, here’s an email we received from a course creator after we sent along a link to our review, asked them to let us know if anything was factually incorrect, and noted that we’d be happy to update any errors…
We have received several such threats over the years and have never removed a review in response.
Usually what happens in these situations: the course creator realizes that such bullying tactics are ineffective, and they eventually tell us what parts of the review they take issue with.
We evaluate their feedback and update the review if appropriate 👍
How do students submit a review of a course?
There are multiple links to submit a review on each course page.
For example…
Click on such a link and you’ll be taken to a review form, where we ask you to provide information about yourself and your experience with the training.
How do you ensure student reviews are legit?
We do a few things to filter out fraudulent student reviews.
First of all, each reviewer must verify their email address before they can submit a review.
They must also provide a link to at least one active social media account or personal website, which we use to verify that they are a real person.
(A reviewer can opt to have their review published anonymously, but we still require them to provide a link to a social media account or personal website so we can verify their identity on the back-end.)
Lastly, we calculate a trust score for each student review, based on a number of factors.
For example…
- If they provided proof of purchase
- Time in the course
- Past experience with online business
- Any contradictions in their responses
The better the score, the more weight that student review will have on the overall rating of the course.
If a review seems suspicious or doesn’t provide enough insight, we follow up with the reviewer via email and/or social media to ask for more info.
Through this process, we end up rejecting 20-30% of all submitted reviews.
We do all this to avoid the Trustpilot trap, whereby even the most meaningless / spammy reviews get approved and apparently have equal impact on the overall rating.
For example…
Why are some student reviews marked as biased?
You may see the following message atop some student reviews…
This reviewer has a business relationship with the course creator or a competitor. Not included in overall ratings.
We mark students as having a relationship with the course creator if they answer YES to any of these questions…
- Are you an active affiliate of this course (or a similar course), regularly recommending that other people buy it through your affiliate link?
- Are you the creator of this course, their employee, or business partner?
- Are you the creator of a similar course, their employee, or business partner?
We still publish reviews from students who answer yes to one of those questions – so long as the review is insightful – but their rating doesn’t factor into the overall rating of the course.
We do this to ensure the integrity of our reviews.
Otherwise it would be too easy for a course creator to, for example, get their army of affiliates to submit positive reviews and boost the overall rating of their course.
Can course creators respond to student reviews?
Yes.
A course creator can send us their response to any student review and we will publish it so long as it adheres to our editorial standards.
(We never provide course creators with identifying or contact info of a reviewer unless we receive explicit permission from the student to do so.)
Can course creators remove student reviews?
A course creator can request that a student review be removed, but we rarely oblige such requests.
The main exception is if the course creator provides proof that a student review contains misinformation.
Questions or Comments?
If you have questions or comments about our review process, contact us here.