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  • Report:  #1481817

Complaint Review: Bill Mcintosh's Promotion Engine - Las Vegas Nevada

Reported By:
meticulous - Madison Heights, United States
Submitted:
Updated:

Bill Mcintosh's Promotion Engine
Las Vegas, 1439066 Nevada, United States
Phone:
(302) 724-6254
Web:
promotionengine.com
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?

I bought their software/product called, Promotion Engine, when I attended Bill Macintosh's webinar nearly 2 years back, for $1497.00. Bill had promised a 30 day money back guarantee.

After 2 days, I called them and asked for a refund. Their employee, Samantha Monteo(I believe that was her name)flat out refused to give me a refund. She said that they did not have a refund policy and that, Bill had made no such committment. I was shocked to hear that!

I kept on following up with her for almost 3 weeks(could me a little more). She was either extremely rude and unprofessional, or simply ignored my phone calls. 

She then said that, as a very special case, they would refund me half the amount I had paid. I was unwilling to lose $750. So I decided to just keep the product and use it. I knew that I was fighting a losing battle.

After the completion of one year, I could not access the product. I called to find out the reason. Samantha said that I would have to pay $1497 again for one more year, since the 1497 I had paid the first time gave me access to the product for only one year! 

I could not believe that!!! Samantha said that it was clearly in their terms and conditions. I said that if Bill had said so in so many words during the webinar, I would never have bought the product in the first place.

Clearly, Bill Mcaintosh is a very dishonest man and preys upon gullible buyers by promising the moon, by not being candid, by concealing things, and by creating a false sense of urgency and scarcity during webinars.

BEWARE OF BILL MCINTOSH, promotionengine.com and jobcrusher.com!!!

 



1 Updates & Rebuttals

John

Takoma Park,
United States
You spend a lot of time...

#2General Comment

Sat, July 13, 2019

...being "shocked" and "unable to believe" that what a person told you to your face is different from what the written terms and conditions are.  Personally, I'm shocked and unable to believe that someone shelled out money based on what I guess they thought was an oral contract (an oral contract, btw, is not worth the paper it isn't written on.)

You were shocked and unable to believe that a smooth-talking total stranger told you untruths to get your money and then won't live up to his promises now that he has it, which suggests to me that you are a very young person who has no business being in control of his own money yet.  My guess is that somewhere among the other papers you have not bothered to read you have an actual, written contract which says exactly what you were told (to your shock and disbelief) about the agreement, which you signed, and which leaves you with no recourse other than to learn an expensive lesson and not just assume that that guy you just met who Seemed So Nice is telling you all you need to know and that thing you signed is a formality that means nothing if it contradicts what the Nice Guy Said. 

And if you didn't have a contract, but this agreement was strictly oral?  Then you really are incapable of handling your own money.  You don't mention an actual contract anywhere- when told what the agreement was, you just express "shock"- you don't contradict it by quoting the contract.   

Your last two sentences are absolutely correct, but seriously- use your brain next time. 

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