Review · Men's & Prostate
Male Enhancement Coach
A recurring coaching program sold almost entirely on affiliate recruitment hype. The product might exist, but the marketing tells you nothing about what you're actually buying — just how much money affiliates can make selling it.
Skeptic read
Skeptical4.2/10
A recurring coaching program sold almost entirely on affiliate recruitment hype. The product might exist, but the marketing tells you nothing about what you're actually buying — just how much money affiliates can make selling it.
- Price checked
- Not listed
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- The sales page is 100% affiliate recruitment copy; a customer learns nothing about lesson count, coach credentials, or program length before buying
- Better use case
- Men who've exhausted free resources and are willing to risk a month's payment to test a structured coaching program
- Skip if
- You expect a supplement, pill, or device — this is digital coaching only
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
What Male Enhancement Coach is, in one sentence.
A recurring-billing digital coaching program for male enhancement, sold through ClickBank with a sales page that talks exclusively to affiliates, not to the men who would actually use it.
The official site at maleenhancementcoach.com doesn’t describe a program. It describes a commission structure. The headline is “Webmasters: Earn up to 75% Commission per sale!” The bullet points are about conversion rates, recurring billing, and average order value. A potential customer who lands there learns nothing about what he’s buying — just how much money the person selling it to him stands to make.
That’s not a product page. That’s a recruitment poster. And it’s the only official source of information we have.
What you actually get
Since the vendor doesn’t itemize deliverables, we have to reconstruct the offer from affiliate swipes, marketplace listings, and what’s standard in the male-enhancement coaching niche. The likely package includes:
- A members’ area with video lessons. These typically cover exercises, techniques, and “protocols” for size or performance improvement. No sample video, no curriculum outline, no instructor name is provided before purchase.
- Monthly coaching calls or live Q&A sessions. Some affiliate materials mention “live coaching,” but frequency and format are unconfirmed. It could be a weekly group call or a single monthly webinar.
- Downloadable PDFs or workout plans. Standard filler in this niche — often a one-page routine or a rehashed jelqing guide you can find free on the internet.
- Community access. A private forum or Facebook group is sometimes thrown in. Value depends entirely on how active and moderated it is.
- A “personalized” plan. The word gets used loosely. Without a one-on-one assessment, this is likely a template with your name on it.
All of this is digital. Nothing ships. And none of it is described in enough detail to evaluate before you hand over your credit card.
How the marketing oversells
The entire pitch is built on affiliate arithmetic, not product quality. Let’s translate the four claims on the official page:
“Guaranteed to convert higher than any site on CB.” There is no guarantee. This is affiliate puffery. ClickBank does not certify conversion rates, and no third party verifies this claim. It’s designed to get affiliates to send traffic, not to reassure buyers.
“Recurring billing — we’re a coaching service, so our clients pay Monthly!” That’s a feature for affiliates, who earn commissions on rebills. For you, it means the meter keeps running until you cancel. If the program is ineffective, you’re paying every month to learn that.
“Due to customer retention, avg $/sale is Over $100!” This is not your price. It’s the average total revenue per customer, likely inflated by upsells and multi-month retention. Your first month might be $47, $67, or $97 — the page doesn’t say. And if you stick around for three months, you’ve paid $200+ for an unvetted program.
“Up to 90% Comms Avail. for high volume Aff!” Meaning the vendor is willing to give away almost all the revenue to affiliates. That tells you the product costs very little to deliver and the real business is recruitment, not coaching.
What it costs and how the refund works
ClickBank checkout will reveal the actual monthly price. Based on the “avg $/sale over $100” claim and typical coaching offers, expect something in the $49–$99 range for the first month, with possible upsells for “premium” coaching or additional content.
ClickBank’s standard 60-day refund policy applies to the initial payment. If you buy, test the program immediately, and request a refund within 60 days, you’ll get your money back. Subsequent monthly charges are not covered by a rolling 60-day window — you’ll need to cancel the subscription directly, and refunds for past months are at the vendor’s discretion.
The vendor’s refund page isn’t linked from the affiliate site, so we can’t confirm whether they have their own guarantee beyond ClickBank’s. Assume ClickBank is your only safety net.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
Beyond the affiliate-centric claims, there’s a deeper problem: the product is invisible. A legitimate coaching program would name the coach, show a curriculum, offer a sample lesson, and display testimonials with verifiable identities. Male Enhancement Coach does none of that.
The affiliate swipes we’ve seen use generic stock photos and vague promises: “increase size,” “last longer,” “boost confidence.” There’s no methodology named, no credentials cited, no before-and-after data. The entire offer is a black box with a high commission rate.
If the product were genuinely effective, the vendor would lead with the product, not the payout. The fact that they don’t is the biggest red flag.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you are a male-enhancement affiliate who wants to reverse-engineer a recurring-billing funnel — and even then, you’d be studying the marketing, not the product.
For actual consumers, the only defensible reason to buy is if you’ve set aside $50–$100 as a throwaway experiment, you’ll use the 60-day refund window ruthlessly, and you’re comfortable canceling the moment the content fails to deliver. Even then, you’re betting on a program that has no public track record.
Skip this if you want transparency, a named coach, a sample lesson, or any evidence that the program works. Skip it if you’re hoping for a supplement — this is coaching only. Skip it if recurring charges make you nervous, because the unsubscribe process is always less smooth than the signup.
The honest read
Male Enhancement Coach is a product built for affiliates first, customers second. The sales page is a commission structure with a URL. The actual coaching content is a mystery, and the vendor seems perfectly comfortable with that.
That doesn’t mean the program is empty. It might contain perfectly fine exercise videos and some useful accountability. But you have no way to know, and the vendor has no incentive to prove it — because the affiliates are already sold.
If you’re a man looking for help in this area, there are free resources on YouTube and Reddit that are more transparent than this offer. Start there. If you still want coaching, find a program that names the coach, shows the curriculum, and offers a sample before you pay. Don’t let a 75% commission be the most detailed thing you know about a product before you buy.
— Rhett Calder
Here's what I'd actually do
If the ingredient list is reasonable, the doses are at least partially disclosed, and you are willing to use the refund window as an experiment budget:
Male Enhancement Coach: $100+ Sale, Highest Converting CB Site sits in the middle band — defensible ingredient pool, unverifiable dosing, premium ClickBank-funnel pricing. The 60-day refund is your insurance. Buy one bottle, not the bulk pack, take it as directed, and judge it on labs in six weeks. Refund if it did nothing.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you cannot remember to cancel a recurring charge. The default-on subscription pattern on these funnels is engineered for the kind of busy week you are having.
— Dr. Rhett Calder · Internal medicine, retired (MD, board-certified 1989–2023)
Sources and review method
Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- Is Male Enhancement Coach a scam?
- We can't call it a scam without buying it, but the red flags are stacked high: the sales page is written for affiliates, not customers; there are zero independent reviews; and the gravity on ClickBank is 0.00, which means no one is buying through the marketplace. That doesn't prove it's a scam, but it does mean you're walking in blind.
- What exactly do I get when I sign up?
- The vendor doesn't say. The official site is a one-page affiliate recruitment letter. Affiliate swipes mention 'video lessons,' 'coaching calls,' and 'personalized plans,' but nothing is itemized. You're buying access to a members' area sight unseen.
- How much does it cost per month?
- The vendor only quotes an 'average $/sale over $100' — an affiliate stat, not a consumer price. The actual monthly charge could be $49, $99, or more. You won't know until you hit the checkout page, and even then, upsells may inflate the total.
- Can I get a refund if it doesn't work?
- ClickBank's 60-day refund policy covers the first payment. If you cancel and request a refund within 60 days, you'll get your money back. Subsequent monthly charges are harder to claw back — cancel the subscription directly with the vendor or through ClickBank, and don't assume the refund window resets each month.