Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Frog is a service provider focused on overseas employment in the IT industry and career support in North America, mainly targeting Japanese-speaking users who want to develop their careers in Canada, the United States, and similar markets. Its pages emphasize that it is not simply an English-learning service or a sightseeing-oriented overseas program; instead, it centers on career paths, information, and community support around employment cases at GAFAM, unicorn companies, and local North American firms.
Based on the captured content, the clearest product is the “Community Plan.” This is not a conventional recorded-course product or a structured curriculum. Instead, it is built around a Slack community, members-only events, online meetups, guest talks, market trends, and updates on visa systems. The site also mentions online information sessions held every Wednesday at 19:00 Japan time, as well as entry points for free consultations and LINE inquiries. However, the Community Plan explicitly states that it “does not include direct support from Frog,” so users expecting 1-on-1 résumé editing, interview training, or immigration-plan design should look further into its higher-tier support plans.
The Community Plan costs USD 50 per month, can be canceled at any time, has no long-term commitment, and claims that users can start using it in about 5 minutes after registration. This is a relatively low barrier for people who first want to understand the Canadian IT job market and join a peer community. The page does not show any accreditation, completion certificate, or formal credential that can be used as job-search endorsement, nor does it disclose payment methods, refund rules, or pricing for higher-tier services.
Its strengths are clear positioning: it focuses on North American career development for IT talent rather than generic study-abroad English services. The community size is also appealing, with the page claiming more than 600 members and over 140 active members. Its information coverage spans job-hunting cases, visa changes, daily-life information, and networking, making it suitable for long-term preparation. The limitations are that the Community Plan leans more toward information sharing and mutual support, with limited personalized service; the content is mainly in Japanese, which is not very friendly to Chinese users or those with weaker English; and while employment outcomes are described, there is a lack of publicly verifiable detailed statistics and methodology.
It is suitable for Japanese-speaking users who are planning an IT job search in Canada or the United States, do not yet want to invest in expensive consulting, and hope to first build information channels and a peer network. If your goal is to systematically learn programming skills, obtain certificates, or receive Chinese-language instruction, Coursera, Udemy, LinkedIn Learning, or local job-search coaching may be more appropriate. Access from mainland China and payment availability are not reflected in the main text and need to be tested in practice; the Slack community may also face stability issues under China’s network environment.
⚠ 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 frogagent.com official site.
frogagent.com is an Canada Study Abroad provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach frogagent.com directly.