I'm sceptical about the marketing of this site; using 'VIP' to draw you in then only to have a week (?) to subscribe, with around £300 -£350 paid upfront for lifetime membership. What's the motivation to keep developing materials, say, in 12 months time?
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Good for them. The material I've seen looks well recorded and if the video player works as it appears that it will, this looks to be a great product. I'm not biting because I have too much material backlogged and have other guitar interests.
I've seen the quality of the material Clement has put out in the past and it was pretty good. I can imagine that this would be similar. In that sense, I don't feel that the marketing is dishonest in any sort. I am seasoned enough to surmise that lifetime access means lifetime access to what there is now and what is in the pipeline.
On the business side of this, the producer of the content wants to make some money. In order to make it attractive to consumers, it helps to have an attractive draw. Seb, Rocky, Adrian, et al are top players and are a good draw. They have to/want to make some money for it and this comes either immediately from the content producer or some deferred payment. Bottom line is that they are doing this for some sort of fee.
If I truly put myself through the paces of learning this material, I'm sure even 20 videos would be enough for a year. Using that as a baseline, if I learn one or two concepts from a video and apply the heck out of it and absorb it, my cost would be ~ £15 per video to actually learn. I've paid triple that to sit down with some great musicians and learned less. The "in the style of" lessons from a different producer, to me, offer the greatest value as I actually pick and choose what I learn at my pace.
Honestly, I hope the content is good and people get value from it. And if there is something that I like, I'm glad to help the musician's economy.
If you like what's there already then you buy into it. Don't look at the pipeline of what's coming. It's not Games of Thrones. The price is fair. The problem is the $1 app economy. Seriously. People got too used to it.
Some of their marketing language at 607 school is a bit over the top. But who cares, that's not something to focus on. The point is that these are some of the best people playing in the genre. Some of the best on the instrument on the planet, period. They chose this financially extremely unrewarding genre to perform in. It's our luck really that they stick around. If they can make some $ out of this then good for them.
The way I see it is they don't want to have way too many people overtaxing their servers so they limited the number of signups so that the services can run smoothly. Responsible decision in my view. They attached the VIP acronym to it... whatever.