Andrew Tate Amazon - Fba Course
Students had to submit their P&L sheets live. No hiding losses. Andrew reviewed them personally—on camera, unedited.
“Why do you think they cry?” Tristan asked.
The course was brutal. Lesson one: “Your First Product Will Fail—Plan for It.” Lesson two: “PPC Is a Casino—Here’s How to Count Cards.” Lesson three: “Reviews Are a Lie—Obsess Over Return Rates Instead.” andrew tate amazon fba course
“What? Why?”
Three days later, the “Real World: Amazon FBA Module” launched. No flashy cars. No rented mansions. Just a gray concrete room, a whiteboard, and Andrew in a black tracksuit. Students had to submit their P&L sheets live
“Course is done,” Andrew said. “Shut it down.”
The course went viral—not for hype, but for the opposite. It was boring. Ugly. Real. Return rates dropped. Refund fraud was called out by name. Andrew taught chargeback forensics, how to spot hijackers, and exactly what to say to Chinese suppliers when they raised prices. “Why do you think they cry
He closed the screen. On it was a spreadsheet: 1,247 students profitable. Zero flashy claims. Just a system that hated lying more than it loved winning.
Six months later, the “FBA bros” who mocked him were silent. Their gurus had vanished. Andrew’s students controlled three niche categories: camping cutlery, car jump starters, and ergonomic back supports. They shared data in private chats. They undercut each other’s junk listings deliberately. They stopped competing on price and competed on returns—lowest return rate won the buy box.
Andrew Tate had just finished a late-night cigar in his Bucharest penthouse when his brother Tristan burst through the door.
Andrew didn’t look up from his laptop. “Because no one ever told them the truth. They thought easy money existed. Now they know the truth is harder—but it works.”