Edubirdie Reviews from the Eckerd College Student

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Disclaimer: This post is written by Adam, the student from Eckerd College and our regular customer. We’ve asked him to make the order from EduBirdie.com and tell us if he liked it.

EduBirdie.com is committed to fighting industrial fraud, and any reasonable view of fraud is wrong. It is not always a shameful or mysterious experience, but sometimes it is a brazen, if not downright defiant affair.

It's unclear exactly how many students are working for Edu Birdie, but the numbers are staggering. The number of Reddit and Yahoo users who have left bad reviews suggests that we're wrong about bad online rap.

The answer is simple: the company increased its popularity a year ago through a scandalous marketing campaign. Specifically, the agency paid YouTube stars to advertise on its website, and a BBC reporter spotted the faces in the ads while covering the story in his spare time.

I do not know what to do about it, but it looks as if the quality of the papers they sell is decent. Unfortunately, the company's authors, no doubt published in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and other major newspapers, suggest otherwise.

My hope is to stop students wasting their money on substandard paper, and I am here to talk to you about the quality of their services. You can behave as you like as long as you look at their services, but I am not here for that.

Let me start with the price of this review: How much do you pay for EduBirdie.com? The odd thing is that the company doesn't want you to know, so I'll let you in.

The EduBirdie Prize essay is nowhere to be seen on the website and is only available for $10 a month for a limited time or $50 a year.

To get an insight into the pricing possibilities of the company, I had several authors comment on this article and decided to charge $155.10 for a four-page capstone paper. I placed my order, which was a neat way to lure an unsuspecting customer, and then their bidding system came into effect.

I chose the cheapest offer of $97.90, which was still prohibitively expensive, but with the help of the other authors available I was able to raise my price to $155.10 for a four-page Capstone paper.

Unsurprisingly, the company has enough capital for expensive YouTube advertising, so EduBirdie is clearly a piquant service and a baby of confidence. If they charge too much for students, they won't get your money back, but if they don't, they're probably not worth your time.

If you plan to use the company's services, look for discount codes and coupons to get a better deal. After payment, read EduBirdie's refund policy: "Once the agreed amount has been received in full by the author, the work is deemed to have been completed to your satisfaction and therefore a refund is possible. In plain English, this means you are lucky if you try to get your money back, but if you don't, you are out of luck.

I turned to the market for help provided by EduBirdie, but the work it commissioned on the southern economy during the Antebellum era does not even stand up to superficial scrutiny. Although the author rightly identifies slavery as the main driver of the economic revival of the region, it fails to mention the role of slavery in the development of tools that revolutionized cotton production. Moreover, there is no mention of slave labour, the slave trade in general or slavery in particular.

The former and the latter are acceptable, as I was paid almost $100 for a short job. The problem of inadequate research is compounded by several minor grammar errors.

How can you trust a website that has been discredited countless times on Reddit, Yahoo, Quora, or even the world's most popular news site?

The dilemma weighed heavily on the mind of a well-known writing agency, and EduBirdie has done nothing a similar company would not do. To be fair, the massive criticism of the company by social media users can only be attributed to fake reviews from competitors. After all, at least the famous YouTuber ad campaign was controversial, if not illegal.

Unfortunately, the brazen campaign attracted more customers than it wanted, and is now being investigated by the US Department of Justice.

Authorities have turned their attention to Edward Birdie over possible fraud charges, and his recent PR debacle should alarm cautious students. Overall, it would not be fair to call Edwardian Birdie a fraud, but its current situation warrants further investigation. Can a professor know the difference between an essay ordered from EduBirdies.com and an actual essay in a book?

That does not seem to be the case, and the piece I got had no trace of plagiarism, meaning it would not have been marked by Turnitin.

However, I am not sure how well the service protects customers' privacy, especially in light of recent revelations about the company's privacy policies.

The recent YouTube fiasco has raised questions about whether EduBirdie is safe, but the company has developed anti-plagiarism tools to underscore its firm stance against stolen material. We can assume they will be caught soon enough, given that Edu Birdie has received so much bad press. But they seem determined to make the service as safe as possible for their users, even in the face of the YouTube scandal.

The company itself does well to avoid copying material, and even if you cannot download the free online software from EduBirdie, it can be used to scan your work and check if there is any wrong work, plagiarism or clever thinking.

This Reddit test also shows that the company offers legal, original fonts, but I used commercial software to test the paper I bought and found that it was absolutely unique.

EduBirdie works as promised, it actually works, and you can order homework help right away. Birdie works, but I'm still not sure it's worth the price tag.

How to deliver on the promise of quality writing is another matter entirely, and I would advise others to look for cheaper, better services. EduBirdie.com is a reliable source for college work, but if there is enough money and your notes are not that important, the company may not find them useful.

EduBirdie is not a standout company, but most companies that sell paper cannot be considered reliable if they are poorly written, and they are not that good.

EduBirdie and similar agencies are extraordinarily good at attracting customers, but when it comes to keeping them, they do poorly. Customers are motivated by price and quality, not by the quality of their product or service and not necessarily by price.

If they are unsatisfactory, they go to another company to which they would never return, or they return to the company for the same service.

My Rating

In summary, high quality help is rare and inferior websites like EduBirdie are everywhere. Given the numerous disadvantages, I rate it 3.5 out of 5, with a very poor 1 / 10 rating for the quality of the service and a high failure rate.

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