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Real Appeal has a rating of 2.3 stars from 46 reviews, indicating that most customers are generally dissatisfied with their purchases. Real Appeal ranks 35th among Weight Loss sites.
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I guess it's probably okay for the under 40 crowd. No support, boring sessions. Coaches are all very young, and that's fine, but things change a bit in your late forties (the little girls who coach on Real Appeal just don't get it). Count calories (track your food), exercise, and don't pig out on sweets. That's the plan. Don't expect support. Some free swag, but that's about it. Oh, there's a "north of 50" person on the free workout DVDs. Male. Wonderful. Because the same metabolic/hormonal things happen for men and women, right? So I'm sure my results will closely match those of a "north of 50" year old male. Could Real Appeal not find a female over the age of 25?
If it wasn't free I would ask for my money back. The app is really bad, I do tracking on another site. I'm sure the coaches are nice people, but the coaching sessions are sooooo lame. I've had 3 coaches because my schedule doesn't allow the same time every week. All 3, lots of rah rah but nothing solid.
I'm not sure I want to use Real Appeal. The web app is horrible. Support is mostly useless - probably due to lack of training and moral. No information about how the program works before you sign up. I don't want to support a company that doesn't insist on a better quality experience. A quick internet search leaves you depressed and feeling sorry for the non-management employees that work there. The only people that seem to care about the quality of their work and the customers are the coaches.
Answer: $130 first 2 months each and $30 each month after that. Real appeal makes alot of money from people not properly exiting the program and insurance company keeps paying for empty seats. Seams Highly unethical! Perhaps insurance companies should look into this. I was told 75 seats per class, however never see nearly that number and have tried to move into a class and told it is full Customer service admitted many people just stop attending while insurance continues to pay.