While we don't verify specific claims because reviewers' opinions are their own, we may label reviews as "Verified" when we can confirm a business interaction took place. Read more

To protect platform integrity, every review on our platform—verified or not—is screened by our 24/7 automated software. This technology is designed to identify and remove content that breaches our guidelines, including reviews that are not based on a genuine experience. We recognise we may not catch everything, and you can flag anything you think we may have missed. Read more

Company details

  1. Business Services

Information provided by various external sources

Demand Curve is a Y Combinator-backed marketing services and education company that has helped grow Microsoft, Envoy, Zendesk, Autodesk, Sentry, and 150+ others.


Contact info

4.0

Great

TrustScore 4 out of 5

4 reviews

5-star
4-star
3-star
2-star
1-star

How this company uses Trustpilot

See how their reviews and ratings are sourced, scored, and moderated.

Companies on Trustpilot aren't allowed to offer incentives or pay to hide reviews. Reviews are the opinions of individual users and not of Trustpilot. Read more

Rated 5 out of 5 stars

Had been subscribed to their Growth…

Had been subscribed to their Growth Newsletter for far longer than I'd like to admit before enrolling in their Growth Program. The course was fantastic. Super actionable and straight to the point. Exactly what I needed as a busy startup founder with only so much time to dedicate to marketing and customer acquisition.

February 7, 2023
Unprompted review
Rated 5 out of 5 stars

I would've rather paid these guys what I paid my Alma Mater. Demand Curve knocked it out of the park with this one.

Honestly, this is hands-down, the best marketing course ever made. Although I don't think to label it as a "marketing course" does it any justice.

This course literally teaches you how to take a zero and turn it into a hero. Step-by-step, lesson by lesson, these guys hold your hand and teach you what works and what doesn't. Once you begin reading through the lessons, it becomes clear that these guys know a thing or two, because they've seen a thing or two.

I honestly believe anyone could benefit tremendously from this course, Marketers, CEO's, Product manager, Indie-hackers, high-school students, college grads, my grandma....okay maybe not my grandma but you get the idea.

->Do you have a product idea? Now you'll know how to grow it.
->An eCommerce store has been piquing your interest? Now you'll know how to differentiate yours from the bulk.
->Want to scale your organization? This is it!
->Don't really have anything in mind? You'll learn how to grow and scale "things" regardless. (Think of how many doors that will open for you)
->Will it bring Carol Basking missing husband back? No, it won't. She fed him to the tigers.

At first, I thought they were just another company, with pretty-sounding text and "meh" customer services. I was wrong. Their attention to detail is second to none, just as their customer service.

-> Do you have a question? ask them, they will respond.
-> Do you need help? tell them, they will try to help you.
-> Are you not understanding something? reach out, their whole team is extremely knowledgeable in what they do.

Extremely happy with my experience.
Keep up the good work guys!
Carlos,

May 18, 2020
Unprompted review

The Trustpilot Experience

Anyone can write a Trustpilot review. People who write reviews have ownership to edit or delete them at any time, and they’ll be displayed as long as an account is active.

Companies can ask for reviews via automatic invitations. Labeled Verified, they’re about genuine experiences.

Learn more about other kinds of reviews.

We use dedicated people and clever technology to safeguard our platform. Find out how we combat fake reviews.

Learn about Trustpilot’s review process.

Here are 8 tips for writing great reviews.

Verification can help ensure real people are writing the reviews you read on Trustpilot.

Offering incentives for reviews or asking for them selectively can bias the TrustScore, which goes against our guidelines.

Take a closer look