Devon Canup looks like the guy at Jiffy Lube who changed my oil and told me my muffler was hanging on by a thread.
He claims that faceless YouTube channels are the fastest way for complete beginners to go from zero to $10k or $20k a month in the new economy.
In fact, he says these channels have been making him $60k a month for the past few years.
Is he legit, or is he taking a kernel of truth and stretching it to absurd lengths?
Read every word of this Faceless Channel Academy review to find out.
In addition to the earning potential, Devon lists the following advantages for this business:
- Completely remote
- Flexible schedule
- Great for traveling
- Genuinely help people
- Develop high-value skills
But don’t worry, Devon says, you won’t have to do any of the following:
- Show your face on camera
- Edit videos
- Create your own product
- Deliver services
- Build complex funnels
- Run expensive ads
- Or deal with other business headaches
Why do I feel like Devon enrolled in community college after high school, majored in sports trivia, and dropped out after a semester?
Anyways, D, what type of videos are these then?
All industries, he says:
- Fitness
- Engineering
- History
- Space
- Logistics
- Architecture
- Psychology
- Business
And the list goes on.
Now, Goldman Sachs believes the creator economy will be worth half a trillion dollars by 2027, right? And YouTube accounts for the biggest slice of that, which makes it a great opportunity for you.
Here’s how it works:
- Come up with video ideas.
- Create or outsource the videos.
- Get views.
- Ads play throughout the videos.
- And you make $4 to $8 for every 1,000 views.
Build to 1 million views a month, and you’re bringing in $4,000 to $8,000 before expenses.
And hey, you never know when a video will go viral and print $22,314.01 like one of Devon’s did.
The more videos you upload, the more ground you cover, the better your odds – kinda like spreading your chips across the roulette table in Vegas, trying to bet on as many numbers as possible while the little white ball bounces around, about to determine your fate. And seriously, where’s that broad with your vodka tonic?
Devon puts it another way: Think of it like rental properties, where the advertisers are your tenants and Google (YouTube) is the property manager.
You might assume you need expensive cameras, professional lighting, sound equipment, and a high-end MacBook with the latest video editing software to be a YouTuber. You don’t.
Nor will you spend hours in front of the camera, trying to dazzle and entertain with your content.
YouTube automation uses AI and freelancers to make videos quickly and cheaply.
This frees you up to focus on high-leverage tasks, like coming up with new ideas and planning your monetization strategy.
A few caveats though:
- You have to go through Devon’s program.
- You have to be committed and work hard.
- This is not get rich quick.
- You’re developing lucrative skills that last a lifetime.
According to the only 1-star review on Trustpilot, Faceless Channel Academy costs $6,800 and there are no refunds.
The rest of the Trustpilot reviews were 5 stars and raved about Devon, with one person dubbing him “the Alex Hormozi of faceless YouTube channels.”
Reddit, on the other hand, is full of people bickering over whether Devon still has active faceless YouTube channels, questioning his net worth, and cynically wondering why he’s selling a course if he’s really succeeding at what he teaches.
I’ve been called the Leila Hormozi of ordering takeout, just so ya know.