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Company details

  1. Affiliate Marketing Service

Written by the company

We do solo ads for youtube.com


Contact info

2.7

Poor

TrustScore 2.5 out of 5

10 reviews

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1-star

Hasn’t replied to negative reviews

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Rated 1 out of 5 stars

No stars.

No stars.
Placed a few orders on YouTube advertisements for products such as beauty aids.
Be warned what you get isn't the thing that you saw being advertised on YouTube. For example the product isn't exactly what you had ordered, either damage, faulty, not the right size, poor quality.
These advertisements are out to get your money.

2 April 2026
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Very poor communication

Very poor communication. They try to convince you that you are getting a good click rate when after over 1400 clicks not one customer appointment scheduled. I do not care if there is billions of clicks. If there is no ROI something is wrong. Avoid this company unless you want to pay for zero results and almost no replies to emails from the company 3 months of nothing is still nothing

27 March 2025
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Just watching YouTube now the ads are a…

Just watching YouTube now the ads are a minute long with no skip prompt after watching 4 mins of a video. YouTube is extortionate and torture the viewer it never used to be like this. The owner of YouTube make me sick.

12 July 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

YouTube ads are not fact checked. Beware the crooks

YouTube ads are not fact checked.

Numbers of fake companies found the glitch, make videos full of Lies to sell you expensive products very far from the qualities they advertise.

When you want to find the companies, you simply can't. You wasn't linked to a website, but to a page in a huge place where there is no navigation.

I bought like that fortunately with PayPal an expensive insect catcher allegedly based on an innovative technology. It was nothing else than a Chinese electric lamp that catched nothing. I got reimbursed. But I noticed that the seller didn't sell an unique item, but set up an abonnement.

Today I almost fell for a procedure to reverse diabetes.

The doctor named in the video didn't exist, however some informations made sense, so I decided to dig.

I ended up on a Columbian curse platform that was meant to sell me a curse (why not) but the price was not fluctuating depending upon the vat of the country.

Then I read the comments of the clients. It turned out that they got extorted money on recurring payments, or on orders never delivered.

It seems to me that if YouTube Wants to get revenue from publicity, they should at least make sure that they are not opening a large door to Crooks that are not only there to steal their viewers.

14 November 2023
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Same AD

Same AD, different Sponsored . But still can't stop a single shooters. 11157 Shoal Creek Elementary, San Diego. Oct32. Call Marines. Cops can't do Jack. 2:30 second Ad.

25 September 2023
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

One of the most pathetic service I have…

One of the most pathetic service I have ever received. They charge you mammoth amount of money even when you have set a daily budget as per their suggestion. They don't have any contact center which is strange for such a big company. The only way to contact them is via raising an online case which they reply as per their convenience and keep charging you in the mean while and you cannot do anything. You feel so helpless and frustrating and there is no way to correct it at all. While Facebook advertisement is similar they do have some ways to connect and besides they don't cross the daily budget limit.

18 June 2023
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Fraudulent service, evidence proves it...

The Story

On 10/11/22 we ordered:
1. 48 million emails would be sent 7 times (336,000,000 total emails sent)

2. Our target audience (Men, ages 31-64, interested in lawn & garden, in the US, Canada, UK, Australia, and New Zealand).

3. Min. 40,000 Click Guaranteed per 8 million x 6 campaigns = 240,000 Clicks Guaranteed.

4. Campaign date: 10/19-11/01/22. The campaign was to be completed in total over these 14 days.

Conclusion & Desired Resolution
The drastic underperformance of the campaign (the portion of clicks that we did receive), combined with the physical evidence presented on a thumb drive, along with the Law of Big Numbers (336,000,000 sent emails), suggests that the clicks received were fraudulent in some way. It is not our intent to speculate, nor is it constructive to do so. But it is beyond all probability and rationale to believe that a legitimate, targeted email solo ad campaign, carried out by “20-year professionals,” would yield no conversions (0% conversion rate).

Our final conversion rate numbers were 0 conversions /53,619 clicks (based on Cutt.ly).

We did not receive 85%+ of the clicks promised (40,000 Click Guaranteed per 8 million x 6 campaigns = 240,000 Clicks Guaranteed).

Q.A.M. refused our email requests to provide evidence that their targeting was accurate and real. But they did prove that their email lists were inaccurate (not targeted).

Lastly, there is no evidence, outside of Cutt.ly statistics which have been proven to be inaccurate, that the few clicks received were legitimate (clicks coming from solo ads them or their chosen source created). But there is a very strong suggestion that these few clicks received were not quality or carried out by real human beings fitting our demographics & interests. The evidence strongly suggests as much.

Nothing we received from “Quality Ads Marketing” was “quality.”

Our request is for a full refund of $3,193.00.

2 November 2022
Unprompted review

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