Beware: Coach Inayah is just Stayly rebranded. They constantly change names to bury bad reviews. Same team, same recycled content, same overpriced program. Search for “Stayly reviews” before you decide, the pattern speaks for itself.I joined Stayly (also known as I&B Coaching) marketed by Inayah McMillan and Bryson Blocker and wasted thousands on promises that were never delivered. What matters now is this: they are rebranding again. Stayly is now Coach Inayah. When a company keeps changing names every few months, it’s not a brand strategy; it’s reputation laundering. It’s a tactic to bury bad reviews, confuse customers, and make it harder for victims to connect the dots.A legitimate business builds its name. A shady one keeps changing it to escape its past.***Reply***Let me be clear: I’m not “hurt,” and I don’t need “closure.” What I need is for people to see the pattern here. Rebrands don’t just “reflect an evolving mission,” they splinter reviews and bury accountability. Students deserve to see contracts before paying, not after when they’re locked in.For the record, my credit cards refunded me, after seeing the overwhelming evidences. By the grace of God, I’m financially blessed and content, so your petty theft cannot phase me. What bothers me isn’t the money, it’s watching you recycle the same tactics on people who may not be as fortunate, and who end up carrying the financial loss.And since you mention “transparency,” I’ll also point out something deeply concerning: the way you use Islam, sprinkling in religious imagery, to build trust. Faith should never be used as a marketing tool to sell dreams that don’t match the reality. That is manipulative and offensive. My review isn’t a “false accusation.” It’s my documented experience, and I’ve seen too many others report the same: constant name changes, deleted posts, contracts handed out after payment, and a business model built more on selling the course than on real Airbnb success. If you’re confident in what you do, publish the receipts — past names, refund records, and full student outcomes that can be verified independently. It's clear your earning comes from selling the course not Airbnb.So let me ask you directly: how do you justify all the different names — Airbnb Breakdown Academy, Stayly Academy, Coach Inayah, and now Inayah McMillan — and why should anyone trust that another rebrand won’t happen the moment reviews pile up again?Another issue that cannot be ignored is how students are often pushed into affirm loans instead of paying with credit cards. This feels less about helping people and more about protecting the company from chargebacks when students realize the program isn’t what was promised. Forcing people into debt they can’t easily escape is worse than riba — you’re not just taking money, you’re burying them under interest and long-term financial harm.If this company truly lived by the Islamic values it sprinkles into its marketing, they would be more afraid of wronging people than of refunds. Islam is about fairness, honesty, and fearing Allah in every transaction. You can’t claim faith on one hand and exploit people on the other.I’m not going to go back and forth with you. The thing about wrongdoing is that it always comes back around; that’s not something I need to argue, it’s just how life works.For anyone reading this: don’t take my word alone. Search for reviews under all the names this program has gone by — Airbnb Breakdown Academy, Stayly Academy, Coach Inayah, and now Inayah Academy or Inayah McMillan. See the patterns, compare the stories, and make your own judgment.
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Short term rental management and education.