Autopilot Check System Review. Is it Legitimate?

When I first discovered Autopilot Check System, I thought it would be a new program for me to review, but then I quickly learned that this is once again a promotion for a high ticket system I’ve been seeing for quite awhile now, and to this day, I still cannot recommend it because there’s just too many things I see missing (like the name of what’s being promoted as the big one).

This review will be short and yes I will be recommending something else instead of Autopilot Check System (that I do promote). I also did not buy what Autopilot Check System provides even though:

  1. I think Wes is being authentic and honest.
  2. I do believe whatever Autopilot Check System promotes, you can make money from.
  3. But the very fact that I have to say the words “whatever Autopilot Check System promotes” shouldn’t even be a thing. It should be obvious stuff, and yet it isn’t based on what I saw (and it’s one of the main things that gives me pause).

Update: Autopilot Check system has gone through several updates/changes.

I’ve seen several updates on the part of Autopilot Check System and at one point, it just redirected to a Clickfunnels website.

There’s another update where I was marketed this program from a YouTube ad and it is basically a landing page pretty much the same to the original review you’re about to read and thus, it’s still still just as relevant in my opinion. Here is the older review:

A short summary of Autopilot Check System (Aka 2021 Checks):

autopilot check system review

Creator:

Wes (this is the second time I see this person promoting the same high ticket program).

Price:

$1,000’s to $10,000’s (plus buying ads which could be $100s and $1,000s more).

What exactly is Autopilot Check System:

  • Autopilot Check System is a promotion by Wes for a high ticket system I’ve seen numerous times now (I can’t find the official name of it).
  • Whatever this system is, it costs $1,000s-$10,000s to enter into.
  • Once you buy into it, you can then promote it.
  • And all you have to do to promote it is buy ads and clicks from this opportunity.
  • For every person (click/ad) who signs up under you, and buys this same system, you earn high ticket commissions.
  • This is said to be a done for you system in which you only buy into the opportunity, then buy the clicks and they handle the rest.

So in short: Spend $1,000s (and much more) for a high ticket system (whose name isn’t mentioned for some reason) and then they will help you close sales to others you promote this same system to.

On a good note though, out of the people I see promoting this program, Wes has been much more transparent about what you have to do to make money with it (like spend time advertising it too when you buy it), and that’s one of the reasons I like him.

Do I recommend it? More no than yes.

My rating for Autopilot Check System (2021 Checks): 2 out of 5 stars

Alternatives:

autopilot check system new alternative 01

Let’s dive into this review of Autopilot Check System:

For starters, let me say this:

By buying into this program, you are not buying into Autopilot Check System, but instead a very high ticket program I’ve been encountering for months which costs you a ton of money to join and has hardly any information I’ve ever seen with a make money online opportunity.

And besides this promotion of it, I have seen several other people and sites with different names all doing the same thing.

Allow me to name a few:

Now there are a few small differences with how Autopilot Check System and Wes (it’s creator) promotes this high ticket program vs the other people I’ve seen doing it through the programs I listed above:

1) First, Wes actually reveals that once you buy into the high ticket program, “all” you have to do is buy ads from this program.

The idea being that the more ads and traffic you buy to send to this same promotion, the more money you can make which is technically true.

The problems with this is that in my experience (and opinion), it’s very risky to buy traffic from third parties when you have very little or no control over it. And being an experienced marketer, I can say this. In this context, it’s risky in my opinion because:

  • You don’t know if it’s legitimate or just garbage solo ad traffic.
  • You don’t know if it’s even real people or bots that you’re paying for.
  • You don’t know if the traffic is really targeted.
  • You have no clue about the ad/traffic behind the scenes.
  • You are just told you pay for the marketing and let them handle it basically (I am very careful about that sort of stuff).
  • You have no guarantee this will work out and can end up spending $1,000s more on top of your initial entree fee to join the program in the first place ($3k to over $20k).

I wish Wes gave more details on what kind of ad traffic this was, because it would help me give you a better opinion here. Without details, I am left to speculate (but am happy to update if that info comes about).

Update: It appears to be Google Ads or YouTube Ads traffic, which can be profitable (if done right, but it can also be very expensive).

I always have to repeat this: Autopilot Check System is not the name of this program. It is an affiliate for it. And what “that” program actually is, is unbeknownst to me to this day.

2) Second, I’ve reviewed a different program name made by the Wes:

And it’s called Checks on Repeat. And guess what? It’s literally the same promotion. Is this a bad thing? In most cases no.

It just depends on what’s promoted because there’s 2 ways I look at people who run multiple promotions of a program (or just have multiple sites promoting the same things). Here’s the most distinct differences:

The good option: 

Many legitimate marketers run multiple sites, videos and ads promoting the same program. I personally do it with a program called Wealthy Affiliate. by promoting it through the following things:

The bottom line however is this: If the thing you’re promoting is a good, legitimate system, then there’s nothing wrong with this.

In this case, I have mixed feelings because:

  1. The program does work in my opinion.
  2. I think Wes is cool and genuinely well meaning.
  3. But I just don’t believe in this because it’s very expensive and that’s risky, plus the name of the program isn’t mentioned even once on the page. I even looked at the page carefully, watched the videos, read the text, and not once did I hear or see it.
  4. Furthermore, even if this is all legitimate, there are no guarantees and their own earnings disclaimer page says this. Funny enough, when I clicked on it within the Autopilot Check System page, it transferred me to the Check on Repeat page’s earnings disclaimer page (one of Wes’s other promotions for this same system).

Anyway, here is one of the earnings disclaimer statements to note (this is a screenshot):

auto pilot check system checks on repeat disclaimer screenshot

To be honest, I agree with this earnings disclaimer and most of the stuff it says.

No matter how good any opportunity sounds, whenever you put money into anything, there is risk and in this case, there is a lot to potentially invest and in my opinion, in this case, it’s quite a lot.

You’re welcome to look at some of my recommended programs, including my preferred choice below (which I do promote), but every single one of these recommendations requires work, time and being realistic about making money online.

autopilot check system compared to wealthy affiliate 04

Conclusion: Given everything I said, let’s objectively look at Autopilot Check System:

On whether or not I recommend it, you already know the answer and the objective arguments are very clear. Here they are:

1) I can tell you that I saw no name attached to this high ticket program:

Remember, Autopilot Check System is just an affiliate page for the other program, with no name on the sales page for it (why?).

2) I am not a fan/proponent of any system that says it’ll do “everything” for you or is high ticket:

These types of system typically ask you for a lot of money and claim a lot.

The pitch Wes gives is that once you join for whatever crazy amount you spend to become a member, then you’ll need to buy more (ads/traffic). And then their team will handle the rest basically (considering it’s legitimate).

But like I pointed out above, there’s so many questions/concerns about how that all works that it’s just risky it in my opinion.

I buy ads from sources I trust and have control over and I understand how the business of online sales funnels works and like I said before, trusting someone you don’t even know (a team in this case) to “handle it for you” is just a major risk I personally wouldn’t take. It’s your money though, so it’s your decision.

But I always suggest people be careful with any promotions that make it sound like once you spend money and do very little if nothing else, it’ll come back easy (this is just not the case in my experience because this business is not that simple and there is always a level of risk involved).

autopilot check system disclaimer

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