Well designed programs, but a fundamental mismatch between claims and content
I rarely leave negative reviews, but this one reflects my experience after completing the Quantum Leap Coaching program and engaging with the company afterwards.
To be clear, this is not about the intention or the energy of the team. Arash and his team are highly charismatic, motivating, and fully present in their delivery. For many people, this may be valuable.
However, my experience revealed a fundamental mismatch between what the program is presented as and what it actually delivers.
The program is marketed as a structured, step-by-step system designed to produce measurable results and a “quantum leap” in income. It is positioned as a methodology with clear tools and actionable strategy.
In practice, the content is primarily based on repetition, mindset concepts, identity work, and abstract principles. While these elements may be useful in certain contexts, they do not constitute a structured, verifiable method that can be applied to professional domains such as trading.
This was not a minor mismatch. It was a core incompatibility with the goal I clearly communicated during the sales process.
To be fair, this type of approach may be effective in certain contexts, particularly where strong emotional persuasion, speed of execution, and sales-driven environments are central to the business model.
However, that was not the path I was pursuing, and it was not how I positioned my goals during the sales process. The program was still presented to me as applicable.
The question is not whether the method can work in some contexts. The question is whether it was appropriate for the goal it was sold for.
In my case, I was told that the program could support a financial breakthrough in trading. However, many of the core teachings directly contradict the requirements of that field. Concepts such as constant action, speed, and reduced analytical thinking are not aligned with disciplines that require patience, structured decision-making, and risk management.
What is particularly concerning is not just the content itself, but the way it is framed.
The program repeatedly presents simplified, outcome-driven statements such as “money loves speed” or “there are only two steps to wealth,” while at the same time not providing a clear, causal mechanism that connects these ideas to real-world results.
This creates the impression of a results-oriented system, while the underlying structure remains abstract and inconsistent.
Another structural concern is that the framework tends to explain both success and lack of success in a way that protects the method itself.
If a participant experiences results, this is taken as confirmation that the process works. If a participant does not experience results, the explanation is typically that the process has not yet been fully internalized, that the mindset is not yet aligned, or that the participant is still operating from the “wrong paradigm.”
This creates a closed loop in which the method itself is not meaningfully testable. The responsibility for outcomes is consistently shifted toward the participant, without clearly defining under what conditions the method itself would be considered insufficient or not applicable.
For a program that is marketed around measurable transformation and significant financial change, this lack of a clear evaluation framework is a material concern.
I raised these concerns directly with the company and outlined them in detail. The responses I received did not address the substance of the points raised. Instead, the discussion focused primarily on contractual terms, disclaimers, and prior participation.
Even when the issue was escalated through formal complaint channels, the core question remained unanswered: how the marketed methodology is intended to function as a reliable, outcome-producing system.
The program may be valuable for individuals seeking motivation or mindset reinforcement. However, it is not suitable for all professional contexts, and in my case, it was not aligned with the goals it was presented for.
The overall presentation is polished and compelling. But for me, the key issue is credibility. When a program is positioned as a structured, result-driven methodology, the content should reflect that level of clarity and applicability.
If you are considering this program, I would strongly recommend evaluating carefully whether the underlying approach is actually compatible with your specific goals and field.








