Well, they want to make safe money by taking fees from those who want to learn it. I think this kind of training shows the beginners a way in but its really down to the individual how to interpret and advance the training they receive.
I think that's kind of the main theme for new traders taking training.
You hear lots of people saying that paying for training wasn't very good, it didn't make them an overnight millionaire or that they still had many years of learning afterwards.
But, you do quite often hear things like "If I didn't take the training course than I would never have stuck it out" or "the training course got me started in the right direction".
Whatever training company people go for I think people should just be aware that there is still many months hard work, and no short cuts.
I think a brand new trader does need help with direction in their learning, I would recommend a training course aimed for beginners that teaches using software, technicals, money management and a few proven strategies to get them started. Most importantly, a cheap one that doesn't pretend to offer a whole lot more just by charging thousands of pounds.
I think a new trader is better off paying a small amount for a good beginners course, going through the process and then investing their own funds in themselves
once they have had plenty of practise and experience in the markets. Don't be fooled by salesmen and "secrets of a millionaire trader" type scams, there are no secrets, there are no short cuts, there is only learning. Learning about yourself.