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WHAT WILL YOU GET!
What YouTube for Business by Stephanie Kase Claims / Offers
These are the features and promises as per her official site and marketing materials:
Main Promise / Positioning
YouTube for Business (YFB) is a course to help business owners use YouTube as an evergreen lead & sales engine — not just a content platform. It claims a workflow that takes ~4 hours/week (or ~4 hours/month once systematized) for generating leads / conversions over time.
Core Components / Included Features
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Lifetime access to modules / lessons (video + templates + downloads)
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AI “assistants” / custom GPT tools configured to help with video ideas, outlines, thumbnails, descriptions etc.
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12 modules with 55 video lessons (according to the sales page)
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2 live group coaching / Q&A calls (bonus)
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Templates, checklists, workflows, and tech / filming tutorials (light gear, smartphone permitted)
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A “6‑month YouTube Profit Guarantee” — if students post at least one new long‑form video per week for 6 months and don’t make money, Stephanie says she’ll work with them until they do
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The pricing: $1,397 (or 4 payments of $397)
Other Positions / Supporting Claims
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Stephanie shares her own results: e.g. she reports that through YouTube she now gets 400+ email opt-ins per month, thousands in affiliate revenue, and consistent sales (without heavy paid ads)
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She states that YouTube is under‑utilized by many business owners, and that with the right system (search + evergreen + funnel integration) you can build a “marketing machine” that works while you sleep.
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She emphasizes the shift from weekly 4‑hour commitment initially to 4 hours/month once you have some team members or systems in place.
What Looks Strong / Promising
Here are the aspects I find encouraging or that, if delivered well, could make this course worthwhile:
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Focus on business outcomes, not just content creation
Many YouTube courses teach you how to film, edit, etc. But this one is pitched as “how to make YouTube contribute leads / sales for your business.” That’s a more strategic stance. -
Lifetime access & updates
If she keeps updating content (e.g. when YouTube algorithm or features change), lifetime access is a good perk. -
AI / tool integration
Using custom GPTs or assistants to help with ideation, outlines, thumbnails, etc., if well-built, can save a lot of time and reduce mental load. -
Workflows and systems orientation
Emphasis on systems (templates, batching, outsourcing) rather than ad hoc “post when you feel like it” is the more sustainable approach. -
Guarantee (6 months)
The 6‑month “profit guarantee” is rare. It shows confidence, but we need to check the fine print. -
Her YouTube credentials & metrics
According to a public analytics snapshot, her YouTube channel has ~99,000 subscribers and over 8 million total views.
And she claims substantial results: in one of her blog posts, she says she sold 404 courses in a year, mostly via YouTube lead flow. -
Student success stories / social proof
Her site includes a “Student Hall of Fame” page, where e.g. “Tabitha Emma” is credited with doubling subscribers and monetizing her channel after taking the course.
Risks, Caveats, & Things to Verify
Even with the positives, there are some red flags and important due diligence points to check before committing. Here are things to watch out for or ask:
| Issue / Risk | Why It Matters | What to Ask / Verify |
|---|---|---|
| Claims vs real results | Sales and “profit guarantee” depends heavily on niche, existing audience, competition, etc. A “one-size-fits-all” projection is risky. | Ask for third‑party verified case studies (with metrics, niche, timeline). |
| Guarantee fine print | Often these guarantees come with requirements (post a certain amount, show proof of effort, etc.). Sometimes they are hard to claim. | Request the exact conditions to qualify. What is “making money”? How much? What must you show? |
| AI tool quality / usefulness | Even if you get “AI assistants,” their usefulness depends on how well the GPT is trained, maintained, and whether the output is high enough quality to require minimal editing. Low quality AI output could cost you more time. | Try to see examples of outputs, sample access, or how polished those GPTs are. |
| No refund policy (or tight refund window) | The site says “no refunds available after purchase” (due to the nature of digital courses) while offering the 6‑month guarantee. That raises questions about risk. | Check when and how refunds are allowed, if at all. |
| Requires consistency / long timeline | YouTube generally doesn’t bring fast returns. It often takes months before significant traffic builds. | Be realistic with your expectations: plan for at least 6–12 months of consistency. |
| Niche suitability | Not all niches or business models will succeed on YouTube equally (very narrow, local, B2B with small volume may struggle). | Ask whether the course is suitable for your niche / market type. |
| Promotional bias | Many of the “results” and numbers come from her own site or students vetted for promotions. | Look for independent reviews (on forums, social media, etc.). |
| Dependence on YouTube algorithms / changes | Changes in YouTube’s algorithm, monetization rules, or policies can impact performance. | Ask how the course adapts to algorithm shifts over time, how often the content is updated. |
See More: Peter H. Diamandis – Exponential Mastery
Stephanie Kase – YouTube For Business
Name of course: Stephanie Kase – YouTube For Business
Delivery Method: Instant Download (Mega)
Contact for more details: isco.coursebetter@gmail.com





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