Diabetes Free Review: Facts And Figures Every Consumer Should Know About Dr. David Pearson’s Guide To Get Free of Diabetes
Dr. David Pearson Diabetes Free Reviews: Program Details
Below you will find the important facts and figures I feel every consumer should know surrounding Dr. David Pearson’s Diabetes Free book and complete guide for taking necessary precautions and improve weight loss simultaneously.
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Please note: this is a Diabetes Free review and fan site. If you are looking for the official website so you can purchase the system directly from Dr. David Pearson and qualify for the 60-day money back guarantee and all bonus materials, please click here to be redirected.
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At the end of this post, I have also placed some important consumer alerts about various schemes I’ve found from dodgy websites promoting Diabetes Free (DF) with absolutely no knowledge of the product and that may have ulterior motives to try and trick you into visiting their sites. As a lead reviewer and editor for EUbookshop, I’ve examined hundreds of digital ebooks online and have become pretty proficient at separating legitimate product reviews from fake ones. I developed this fan site as a way to help men and women interested in Dr. David Pearson’s unique system which helps to promote fat burn.
At the end of the day, I believe it’s the consumer’s responsibility to do their own due diligence before investing in any program, but I definitely want to share with you what I’ve discovered during my own research in case it helps.
As always, if you have a question about DF that isn’t answered in one of the posts on this Diabetes Free review site, I field questions at the following email: eubookshophq (at) gmail.com and will do my best to get back to you ASAP. Sometimes it may take me a few days, but if you put “Diabetes Free Question” in the title of your email, it will help me find it and respond quicker.
Ok, on to those facts and figures…
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Product Name: The Diabetes Free
Also Known As: Diabetes Free Program
Author: Dr. David Pearson
Product Website: Click Here For The Verified Official Website For Diabetes Free Program
Product Category: Health & Fitness
Product Sub-Categories: Remedies
Product Description:
The Diabetes Free (AKA Diabetes Free Program) by Dr. David Pearson gives you instant, online access to a simple, step-by-step system in which Dr. David teaches you the key concepts to decrease gluten from your daily life routine.
If you are able to adopt gluten free life style, then you are able to decrease diabetes symptoms significantly. The blood sugar levels and gluten amount are interconnected to each other. Once you are able to reduce gluten, you will see a sufficient decrease in blood sugar levels.
The Diabetes Free guide helps to identify all such foods and specific recipes, which are free from all types of gluten. Some of these foods include wheat, barley, oats, rye, semolina, bulgur and farina.
Dr. Pearson’s techniques help you permanently reduce blood sugar back to healthy levels without the use of daily needles, side-effect filled medications, or harsh and dictatorial diets. Additionally, the Diabetes Free program also advises certain diet and lifestyle changes to cope up with diabetes effectively. All the methods described in the book focus on helping your body to enhance the natural production of insulin.
If your body is able to produce sufficient insulin levels like before, you can get yourself back to the healthy condition. The book also focuses on getting rid of acids from the body, since they severely damage pancreas and natural production of insulin.
(Click here for more information)
Product Notables:
Dr. David Pearson’ Diabetes Free currently holds a Clickbank gravity score of over 100 (extremely popular) and is the top ranked memory treatment guide in the Clickbank Marketplace. Clickbank is one of the leading providers of digital info-products online and uses a variety of factors such as sales volume, popularity, refund rates, and overall customer satisfaction to rank products, so gravity score and marketplace rank are good indicators of product quality.
File Format:
Diabetes Free is a digital product and can be downloaded instantly after purchase in PDF (ebook) format or viewed online.
The Diabetes Free program is compatible with desktop and laptop computers, iPhones, iPads, and virtually any tablet, smart phone, or other device that has PDF viewing capabilities.
Product Cost: $37.00 USD, one-time payment
Shipping Cost: None – nothing is shipped; everything is delivered online
Available Offline At Traditional Booksellers?: No
Available On Amazon?: No
Discount Code Or Coupon?: No
Refund Policy: Backed by a 60-day, no questions asked, full (100%) money back guarantee
Offers Secure Online Payment?: Yes, payments and refunds are handled by Clickbank which employs encryption technologies using Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) from trusted vendors like Verisign and Thawte to encrypt sensitive data such as your financial information.
Where To Learn More: Continue reading more posts on this page or visit the official website to watch Dr. David Pearson’s Diabetes Free video.
Alternatives To Diabetes Free Program: None
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Consumer Alerts Regarding Diabetes Free Program
With the release of Diabetes Free online, I’ve seen a large increase in the number of websites offering up fake reviews, fake discounts (or claiming free downloads), and doing other shady things to bring you to their sites. Usually these sites are pretty easy to identify if you know what to look for. Here’s how you can protect yourself.
1.) The Fake Scam Alert:
This is indicative of sites that usually use a title to their page that says something like, “Diabetes Free Program: Another SCAM!?!” or “Diabetes Free Program: Is Dr. David Pearson a Scammer?” or something of that nature. In other words, when you search for Diabetes Free in Google or another search engine, these sites show up with those types of titles in the listings.
Sometimes these sites will also use what I call the “Fear Factor” in their headlines which is something like, “Diabetes Free Program: OMG So Bad!”. This is often nothing more than an attempt to draw you into their site by making you think they used the product and had a really bad experience with it.
How do I know these are fake and not real scam alerts or legitimate complaints? Because the title cries SCAM!!!!! or a really horrible experience, but then you go to the page and read the review and it’s always an extremely positive, glowing review about how great Diabetes Free is, how much they love it, how it completely eliminated their fat, etc. etc. In these instances, they only use the word SCAM to try and draw you into their site because they know if they say something is a scam or a terrible program, you’ll probably click on their link to find out more about it, right?
A legitimate bad experience or a real scam alert to help protect consumers is one thing, but don’t fall for this type of trickery and trust your gut when the headline/page title and review don’t match. No real Diabetes Free review will cry SCAM or claim it’s a terrible program in the title only to offer up a review that says the complete opposite.
2.) The “Extra Special, Super Expensive” Bonus Package Alert:
With this nonsense, people who have no knowledge of the program offer up some sort of extra special bonus package if you purchase the product through their site. Usually they mark it as something super valuable like $297 or $497 or something like that, but in reality it’s just a bunch of useless ebooks or Private Label Rights (PLR) that you can find online for free if you search for them.
Usually they aren’t even related to the actual product. For example, they’ll be something like “Buy Diabetes Free through the link below and I’ll send you “How to Get Rid of Acne” and these 10 other useless, unrelated, and free books that I’ve put a fake value of $497 on.” Really? What does acne have to do with memory healing? That’s right, NOTHING!
To claim your bonus, they usually want you to email your purchase receipt to them so they can verify you bought from their site. But then, guess what? Now they have your email (not to mention your order details), and can start sending you a bunch of spam or even access the product using your information! Stay away.
3.) The Fake Review:
This one is pretty common. Anytime a product like Diabetes Free gets popular online and people start to buy it, the fake reviews start coming out of the woodwork. Here are some good ways to spot fake reviews.
*Poorly Written Content:
This is usually the result of people using software and “spinning tools” which auto-generate content or take previously written content and “spin it” by replacing some words with related synonyms. Luckily for us, auto-generated content is pretty easy to spot so if you find yourself reading something that has really horrible grammar or makes absolutely no sense whatsoever, then don’t click on any links, hit your back button, and get out of there. If you find yourself saying, “WTF did I just read?”, then it’s probably fake.
*Very Generic Content:
Fake reviews usually have very generic content and rarely provide any real details beyond what might be found on the product’s sales page. Obviously, it’s hard to write any review without some generic statements, but if you’re getting the gut feeling they are being very vague and seem to be “skirting around the bush”, it’s probably because they have no idea what’s really inside the program.
Other things to look for are an over-reliance on or excessively large buy now, download, and other types of buttons. Sure, 1 or 2 buttons may be necessary to direct you where to get the program, but when they become the focal point of the page instead of the content and review itself, then it raises a red flag with me and I know that person doesn’t have my best interest at heart.
If you’re trying to be helpful by telling me about the program instead of just wanting my money, do I really need a huge red arrow from every corner of the page pointing at the download or buy button? I’m not blind. I see it! Really, I do.
I also always look to see if a review provides any specifics about the program. Does it mention the number of pages in the ebook? Does it list a table of contents or discuss what’s found in specific chapters? Does it quote anything directly from the book? Small details like this can be a big indicator of whether or not the reviewer has intimate inside knowledge of the program or if they are just making general statements based on what they may have seen on the sales page.
Some Thoughts On Testimonials:
Some of you have also asked me about my thoughts on Diabetes Free testimonials, and personally I never try to let them influence me one way or another. It’s kind of a love/hate relationship. I love hearing other people’s success stories. Some of them are truly inspiring.
But at the same time, testimonials online are easy to fake, almost impossible to verify, and I personally don’t like basing my decisions on the results someone else may or may not have achieved with a given program.
So I guess what I’m saying is always take testimonials with a grain of salt and realize that with any program, there’s going to be people who like it and who are successful and people who don’t like it or who aren’t successful for one reason or another. I’m a big believer in trying something for myself if I want to determine whether it works or not.
The only testimonials I tend to put a little more trust in are those that come from WITHIN a particular program. For example, programs that offer members only forums and things like that. These people have actually paid for the product (otherwise they wouldn’t have access to the forum), so that’s a much more reliable resource than some testimonial on a sales page or on another random site that could easily be faked.
I try to use my own access as a paying member to pull out some of these types of testimonials to share with my readers whenever I can. I’ll do the same for Diabetes Free Program.
4.) The Free Download Alert:
Just like the Fake Scam Alert, some sites will try to draw you in by claiming you can download Dr. David Pearson’s Diabetes Free for free. Their page titles might be something like, “Diabetes Free Free Download”. Then, you get to the site, and they try to justify it by saying it’s “risk-free” and then point you to the website where it’s $37.00. Well, to me risk-free and FREE aren’t the same thing!
While you can technically try Diabetes Free risk-free because of the 60-day money back guarantee, you still need the money up front to buy it in the first place so it isn’t free. Diabetes Free is not a free program and any site claiming a free download is either not being totally honest with you or is providing illegal copies, neither of which is good.
Another version of this same thing is the fake discount. “Buy through this link for 50% off”. Guess what, when you click the link, you go to the website where it’s $37.00, just like it normally is.
I actually first noticed this one on YouTube where people were making short 30 second videos claiming they found discount links to Diabetes Free Program. However, every time I checked one out, it was a huge disappointment and offered no discount at all.
I’ve never claimed to be a super genius when it comes to math, but something about the numbers just stinks…let’s see…$37.00 minus 50% discount through your link = $37.00! Don’t fall for these fake discount claims.
One last thing I’ve seen in regards to this is that sometimes people will try to inflate the value of the program on their own site to make it appear like they are giving you a discount. For example, they’ll say something like “Diabetes Free is normally $157, but buy through my link for $37.00, a savings of 75%!”
Just another lie you should watch out for. The price will always be $37.00 unless Dr. David Pearson decides to change it herself. If she does, I’ll be sure to let everyone know!
I hope that helps and please stay safe out there!