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Paper Money Secrets presents a “501c3 Application Training” program. Its core pitch is to teach users how to set up U.S. nonprofits for other people, complete the relevant government applications, and earn income from home. The page repeatedly emphasizes learning a “system” to help clients complete important government filings, and claims users can charge at least $500 per application. Overall, it looks more like a training sales funnel aimed at side-hustle or entrepreneurial audiences.
The course topic is very specific: U.S. 501(c)(3) nonprofit applications and related document services. The page does not disclose whether the course is live, recorded, or one-on-one, nor does it provide a module outline, course length, assignments, case library, or practical template details. Based on the page, the teaching language appears to be English. On the instructor side, it mentions William Craig, III and says the system comes from a woman with nearly 20 years of experience, but it does not provide verifiable credentials, legal/tax qualifications, or institutional accreditation. The page also does not state whether a certificate is provided upon completion.
The page does not disclose the course price, refund policy, or payment methods. It only directs users to enter their name and email to begin a “three-step application process.” The copy repeatedly mentions potential earnings of $500 to $2,500 and a minimum of $500 per government application. These claims may be attractive for conversion, but they also mean users should pay close attention to the real difficulty of acquiring clients, compliance boundaries, and whether they are actually qualified to serve U.S. customers.
The main advantage is that the niche is clearly defined, with a concrete demand scenario centered on the pain point of setting up a nonprofit organization. The positioning around home-based work and flexible hours may also appeal to side-hustle seekers. The drawbacks are equally clear: key information is not transparent, including course delivery, pricing, after-sales support, credentials, and success rates. The page has a strong marketing tone and a lot of repeated messaging, so its credibility needs further verification.
It is better suited to people who are comfortable with English, understand the U.S. nonprofit context, and want to serve U.S. clients. Chinese users who simply want to systematically learn nonprofit management may be better off using IRS official resources, U.S. nonprofit law courses, or relevant Coursera/edX courses. The page does not provide information about access or payment from China, so actual usability is unknown. If the service involves U.S. clients, users should also confirm compliance, tax, and legal responsibilities in advance.
⚠ 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 papermoneysecrets.com official site.
papermoneysecrets.com is an United States Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 4.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach papermoneysecrets.com directly.