FanPro Management's Paid Press Campaign
If you are researching FanPro Management, you may have found glowing articles about the company on well-known news sites. Before you trust them, consider the following.
The Articles
FanPro Management has been featured in promotional articles on:
- Yahoo Finance — "The AI Formula Behind FanPro That Turns Creators Into Kim Kardashian Clones"
- Digital Journal — "Inside FanPro: The AI-Driven Agency Redefining the Creator Economy"
- The Blast — "AI Agency Making OnlyFans Stars Into Mini Kim Kardashians"
- Village Voice — "From Passive Branding to Active Cash Flow: Inside FanPro's AI-Enhanced Growth Model"
- Distractify — "How FanPro Helps Creators and Investors Monetize Visibility at Scale"
- New York Weekly — "Shattering Myths: FanPro Management's Unwavering Mission in the World of OnlyFans"
- NewsBreak — "FanPro Is Turning Digital Presence Into an Automated Revenue Engine"
- MK DigiWorld — Interview with Tyron Humphries, Founder of FanPro
Why These Are Likely Not Independent Journalism
These articles share characteristics common to paid/sponsored content:
- No independent verification — Revenue claims ($13M in 4 months, 72% margins) are stated as fact with no financial records cited
- No client interviews — Not a single client is independently quoted or verified
- Promotional language — The articles read like marketing copy, not news reporting
- Near-identical narratives — Multiple articles contain the same talking points and claims
- Distributed through PR wires — Some are published via services like IndNewsWire, which distribute press releases for a fee
- No critical perspective — None of these articles mention the Trustpilot reviews, the ScamAdviser score, or any victim complaints
How Paid Press Works
Many online publications accept sponsored content or press releases that appear alongside legitimate journalism. A company pays a PR distribution service, and the article gets published across multiple outlets. The articles may look like real news, but they are essentially advertisements.
This practice is legal. But when combined with a ScamAdviser trust score of 15/100 and dozens of victim complaints, these articles serve as a tool to create a false appearance of legitimacy.
Update — February 2026
FanPro has expanded beyond paid press articles. As of February 2026, they are running around 15 active ads on Facebook and Instagram simultaneously.
The messaging has changed significantly. Where the press articles talked about "$13M revenue" and "agency exits at $350K–$500K," the new ads take a different tone. Some examples from their current campaigns:
- "Why pay an agency $50k to build an asset for you when you can learn to do it yourself for a fraction of the cost?"
- "Stop Paying $50K for AI Agencies — Get the $5,000 blueprint today"
- "Most ads promise $10k months and 'easy' money. We won't."
- "Stop selling your time. Sell AI systems."
- "These AI Influencers are Out-Earning You"
Notice the first two — they're openly referencing the $50K price range that FanPro itself was charging clients through the DFY packages. The third one is particularly interesting given that FanPro's own press articles were full of exactly those kinds of income promises.
If you found FanPro through one of these newer ads rather than the press articles listed above, the same advice applies: read the victim testimonials before making any decisions.