OverHyped Reviews

Why Does Impulse Typing Professional Ask for Money Upfront?

This was one of the biggest questions I had while looking into the program.

If you're applying for what looks like a typing job, being asked to pay before you start feels unusual.

From what I found, the payment isn't for a typing position. It's for access to the training.

That's an important distinction.

Instead of hiring you as an employee, the company sells a program that explains its business model and how to use it. The upfront payment is the cost of getting access to that information.

Whether that's a good thing or not depends on what you're expecting.

If you're looking for a traditional remote typing job, paying before you earn anything will probably feel like a red flag.

If you're expecting to buy a training program, it makes more sense.

From my experience, this is where many people become confused.

The advertising focuses on typing, but the payment reveals that you're really buying education rather than accepting a job offer.

That doesn't automatically make the program good or bad.

It simply changes what you're signing up for.

Before paying, I'd ask myself one question:

"Am I comfortable paying for training before I've made any money?"

If the answer is yes, then at least you know exactly what you're buying.

If the answer is no, it's probably better to keep looking for opportunities that don't require an upfront payment.

If you want to see how the entire experience worked and what I found overall, I broke it down here.