My Honest Review: I Lost $20,000 to AI Agency Mastermind

I purchased the AI Agency Mastermind program on April 15, 2025, for a hefty $20,000. Man, that was quite the chunk of change to part with. But I felt confident making this investment after being promised one-on-one guidance and genuine support in building my AI business from the ground up.

The accountability situation in the AI Agency Mastermind was, to put it bluntly, a mess. After transferring my $20,000 in April 2025, the daily coaching calls I'd been eagerly anticipating became something of a phantom. They were constantly canceled or shuffled around, often with just a quick “sorry, can't make it“ message. Throughout my six months in the program (April through October 2025), I sat at my desk waiting for calls that never happened about 65% of the time. I kept a log of these disappointments. The leadership team? Well, Wyatt and Carson had looked me in the eye during our sales call, promising mentorship and availability. Yet after joining, I sent 17 increasingly desperate emails and 32 Discord messages between April 20 and October 10, 2025. My inbox remained painfully empty of responses from either of them.

I diligently tracked every attempt to connect after joining. On May 5, 2025, I had a healthcare client waiting for AI strategy implementation and asked specific questions – crickets. By June 12, 2025, I needed critical feedback on my business model but faced a wall of silence. Come July 2025, I noticed I wasn't alone; questions from fellow members lingered unanswered for weeks, sometimes vanishing into the digital void. I documented each instance, date by date, in my growing frustration log.

Something felt off about the Discord community. Studying the active profiles, I noticed strange patterns – similar speech rhythms, clockwork-like posting schedules, and a bizarre lack of meaningful conversation. Between May and August 2025, I reached out to 15 different “members“ hoping for connection, but received responses that felt copy-pasted. When I dug deeper with technical questions requiring actual expertise, I got back vague platitudes or responses that completely missed the point.

The training materials fell short of what I'd expected and seemed stuck in the past. The so-called “proprietary training“ contained information I could've found with a simple YouTube search. In June 2025, their “Advanced AI Prompt Engineering“ module presented as cutting-edge was essentially a rehash of OpenAI's 2023 documentation. Despite promises of “constantly updated materials,“ in July 2025, I was still seeing extensive references to GPT-3 techniques while the rest of the industry had moved on to GPT-4 months earlier.

The sales process back in early April 2025 was night-and-day different. Wyatt and Carson responded to my emails within hours, sometimes minutes. They scheduled three separate calls to address my questions and concerns. This attentiveness vanished the moment my payment cleared on April 16, 2025. Later, in September 2025, I discovered they'd been removed from Whop.com and Stripe platforms, reportedly because of high refund rates and customer complaints. This explained why my August refund request hit a dead end.

When October 2025 rolled around, I decided to investigate their business structure and couldn't locate any registered legal entity tied to AI Agency Mastermind. This made it nearly impossible to pursue proper remedies for what I believe was a clear breach of contract. The $20,000 I invested – money I had carefully saved – produced no meaningful returns, support, or accountability for my business.

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