Editing Education is a training program for freelance YouTube video editors. Its core promise is to help editors use “proven systems” to improve their editing skills, service delivery, and pricing, so they can move away from low-paid, high-pressure projects and attract higher-quality clients. The page mainly promotes the Price-Scaling Protocol, which aims to teach video editors the methods behind top YouTube editing and help them land projects at a minimum of $1,000 per video.
In terms of course focus, this is not a general video editing software course. It is more focused on commercial YouTube editing, freelance work, client acquisition, and raising project rates. The page mentions Free 1:1 Coaching, a Free Masterclass, and the Price-Scaling Protocol, but does not clarify whether the full program is delivered through live classes, recorded lessons, a community model, one-on-one coaching, or a mix of these. There is also no information about certification or credentials, so it should not be viewed as a resume-oriented certificate course.
As for instructors, founder Danny says he reached $12k/month at age 18 through Twitter DMs over two years, generated hundreds of millions of views for clients, and helped other editors connect with major YouTube creators such as Browney, Airrack, Matthew Beem, and Jesser. The positioning emphasizes results, testing, and data rather than generic theory. However, the page is mostly based on the founder’s own narrative and lacks more complete student case studies, a detailed curriculum, and third-party verification.
The website does not disclose course pricing, refund policy, program duration, or specific deliverables. It only states that the program aims to help editors secure clients paying $1,000+ per video. As a result, its value for money is currently difficult to assess. If a follow-up consultation reveals that it includes a structured course, personal diagnosis, portfolio feedback, and client acquisition support, it may be valuable for editors who already have a foundation. But if it is mainly a conceptual course, the risk would be relatively high.
The main advantage is its very narrow positioning: it directly targets editors who want to work with overseas YouTube clients. The content direction appears to cover skill improvement, service delivery, client selection, and personal goals. The downside is limited transparency: the page does not specify pricing, course format, language, class hours, or after-sales support.
It is better suited to freelancers who already have editing skills, want to enter the English-language YouTube creator market, and hope to increase their per-video rates. It is less suitable for complete beginners learning editing software, users focused only on domestic short-video platforms, or anyone mainly seeking a certificate.
Access from mainland China cannot be determined from the page, and payment methods are not disclosed. Since the program is aimed at overseas YouTube work and Twitter DM-based client acquisition, actual learning and execution may require stable access to overseas platforms as well as English communication skills. Alternatives may include YouTube Creator Academy, School of Motion, Motion Design School, and domestic commercialization-focused editing courses for Bilibili, Douyin, and Xiaohongshu.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on editingeducation.com official site.
editingeducation.com is an Unknown Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach editingeducation.com directly.