10K Accelerator (Instagains) Review

10K Accelerator Review

My Review of 10K Accelerator (Instagains)

In this video, I take a deep dive into Ryan Phillips’ 10K Accelerator program, which was originally called Instagains. After exposing the issues with the original program, I thought I was done with it—until I discovered that it had simply been rebranded to make it harder to find negative reviews. In this review, I break down why this program is full of misleading claims and unrealistic promises.

Key Points:

  • It’s the Same Product, Just Rebranded: Ryan Phillips originally partnered with Jono Armstrong to launch Instagains, but after facing criticism, he rebranded it as 10K Accelerator and Affiliate Automation. The core of the program remains unchanged.
  • Misleading Income Claims: Ryan keeps flashing screenshots of his earnings, implying that they come from this system. But Instagains only launched in April 2024. His past earnings came from other business ventures, making his claims deceptive.
  • The Business Model is Flawed: The program claims you can make money by reposting pre-made Instagram videos. The problem? Everyone using the system is posting the same content. Instagram’s algorithm recognizes duplicate videos and suppresses them, so they won’t get views or engagement.
  • The “Done-for-You” System Isn’t Actually Done for You: The program promises an easy, automated system, but it leaves out important costs—like a required subscription to ManyChat, which handles automated messaging. That’s an extra expense they don’t warn you about upfront.
  • Even Ryan Phillips Doesn’t Use His Own System: I checked his Instagram, and he doesn’t follow the Instagains strategy at all. He creates original content—yet he’s selling this as a foolproof way to make money.
  • Jono Armstrong Is Giving It Away for Free: While Ryan is selling this for $2,500, Jono Armstrong (his former partner) is giving away *Instagains* as a free bonus with other offers. If this was truly a high-value system, why is it being handed out for free?
  • High Costs and Upsell Tactics: You can’t just buy the program—you have to book a sales call. That’s a major red flag because it usually means they’re going to push expensive upsells.
  • Final Verdict: This is just another “done-for-you” program that over-promises and under-delivers. These systems never work because they rely on spammy, duplicate content that social media platforms deprioritize.

Conclusion:

If you’re considering 10K Accelerator (or whatever they rebrand it as next), be careful. The income claims are misleading, the system doesn’t actually work, and even the creator doesn’t use it. Save your money and invest in learning real skills instead.

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