Are briefly articles truly fact checked?
I think briefly's articles are generally good but articles like these concern me.
gauteng-teen-jayden-crosson-shares-how-built-a-multi-million-sa-e-commerce-empire
it's published as journalistic fact and Briefly prides itself n fact checking, but a simple gemini fact checking of the article reveals the following .
Fact-checking "success stories" in the e-commerce space requires separating revenue from profit, and business operations from course marketing.
Here is a brutal truth-focused breakdown of the article regarding Jayden Crosson:
1. The "Revenue vs. Profit" Trap
The article highlights "over R5.8 million in sales." In the dropshipping and e-commerce world, sales (revenue) is a vanity metric.
The Reality: Dropshipping margins are notoriously thin, typically ranging from 10% to 30% before advertising costs. To achieve R5.8 million in sales, an entrepreneur often spends millions on Meta (Facebook/Instagram) and TikTok ads.
The Verdict: Without seeing a Net Profit statement (after ad spend, cost of goods, shipping, and platform fees), the "multimillionaire" claim refers to money passing through his hands, not necessarily money staying in his pocket.
2. The "Hybrid Model" vs. Traditional Dropshipping
The article claims he solved the SA dropshipping problem (long shipping and customs) with a "hybrid model" where no stock is bought until the customer pays, but it uses "vetted suppliers with faster local fulfillment."
The Reality: This is standard "local dropshipping" or "arbitrage." Many SA entrepreneurs use local wholesalers (like those in Dragon City or China Mart) or platforms like Takealot’s unfulfilled model.
The Risk: If he is truly dropshipping from overseas (e.g., China) but promising "local optimization," he is likely using a private shipping line (like Buffalo Logistics). While faster, these still face customs bottlenecks. If he is sourcing locally, his margins are even tighter because the middleman (the local supplier) already took a cut.
3. The "Course Seller" Conflict of Interest
The article mentions "Crosson’s E-Com Empire Course." This is a critical detail.
The Reality: There is a common pattern in the "Lifestyle" business:
Build an e-commerce store.
Reach high revenue (even if profit is low).
Use those high-revenue screenshots to sell a course.
The real "multimillion-rand empire" often comes from the course sales (which have 90%+ profit margins) rather than the actual e-commerce stores.
The Verdict: When an entrepreneur's social media is "full of luxury lifestyle" (BMWs, Rolexes) alongside a link to a course, the business model is often Education/Coaching, not just E-commerce.
4. Verification of Assets
The article cites "R3,000,000 in cars" and a "R170,000 Rolex."
The Reality: In the age of vehicle financing and the "grey market" for luxury goods, physical assets are not proof of a liquid business empire. Furthermore, "Supplied" images (images provided by the subject to the journalist) are promotional in nature.
The Verdict: These are marketing tools used to establish "authority" to sell the course.
5. Red Flags in Student Claims
The article mentions an 18-year-old student making "R2 million in four months."
The Reality: These are extreme outliers and almost impossible to verify. In South African consumer law, marketing a business opportunity using "outlier" results without clearly stating the "average" result can be considered misleading.
Summary Verdict:
Is it a scam? Not necessarily. He appears to be running a legitimate e-commerce operation using Shopify and local payment gateways (Yoco).
Is it "Brutally" True? The article is a soft-feature PR piece, not an investigative financial audit. It repeats the subject's claims without asking for a tax return or a balance sheet.
The Bottom Line: Jayden Crosson is likely a very talented digital marketer. However, his "empire" is a synergy between high-turnover dropshipping and high-profit course sales. For a bystander, the e-commerce side is much harder, lower-margin, and riskier than the "flashy" article suggests.
The consequence of publishing incorrect information is that South Africans part with their money in the hopes of achieving financial success which very often never comes.
Articles like this do damage to the credibility of briefly - and should either be adjusted to give a well rounded view or then stated as a PR piece from Jayden Crosson
Happy to adjust my review if Briefly gives a satisfactory answer.


