I’m revealing Iman Gadzhi’s strategy for fooling people looking to start their businesses in 2025. I couldn’t believe how simple it was. After hours of research, I’ll share the main tricks so you don’t waste time and money falling for his content.
Target Market: His “education” platform specifically targets Gen Z (ages 16-24 in 2025), who make up most of his market. They’re chosen because many are looking for alternatives to traditional careers in today’s AI-driven economy, making them perfect targets for his promises of quick wealth.
He sells the dream: The dream of becoming rich like him. And naturally, the “ideal” way is through an agency. Which type? SMMA and AI marketing, of course. He promotes the dream of retiring your parents and owning luxury cars and private jets. It’s the same playbook that Andrew Tate and others have used, just repackaged for 2025.
I’ve noticed this pattern across many of these gurus:
- Make $1000/month with any business model (now with added AI buzzwords)
- Sell a course
- Profit
For credibility, what better way than followers and yachts? The guy has been buying Instagram followers for the past year. This helps him appear more “legit” to fool more people.
Think about it: You’re young, looking for direction in this changing economy. You see someone in luxury cars talking about how you can succeed just like him, with millions of followers everywhere. It’s pretty hard not to believe.
About his “cash cow” agency: The guy had £200,000 in liabilities on his agency, and he was barely making any money.
To those who bought his products: Try to get a refund if you can. Your money is better spent on real skills and practice. You must fail fast – that’s how you learn.
Buying someone else’s courses will make THEM rich, not YOU. In 2025, with AI and automation changing everything, it’s more important than ever to learn by doing rather than just watching someone else’s success story.
Look, I have to point out something huge that’s been bugging me – there’s no way this guy is worth $85 million as he claims. Let me tell you why.
Think about it – his course costs $1000. That’s a lot of money! To make $85 million, he’d need 85,000 people to buy it.
And that’s just the raw number, not counting taxes and all the other costs. Like seriously, have you ever met anyone who’s heard of this guy outside of social media? Plus, he’s up against guys like Andrew Tate, who sell cheaper courses and are way more famous.
Why would anyone pick Iman’s pricey stuff instead?
Here’s the thing – I used to work in ad tech, so I know precisely how YouTube money works. His views show he’s probably making around $1M a year tops from his videos. That’s it.
And you want to know what’s funny? The only “proof” he’s got of being rich is… his own YouTube videos where he boasts about it. Yeah, real convincing 🙄
Oh, and he shows off those fancy yachts, planes, and houses? You can rent that stuff for photoshoots. Tons of these fake gurus do it – rent luxury stuff for a day, take hundreds of pics and videos, then milk that content for months to look rich.
None of this adds up. People will lie through their teeth for money – he’s just really good at making his lies look pretty on camera.