3,070 members. 126 reviews averaging 4.89 stars. And a free entry point that costs you nothing to test.
That combination made me pay attention.
I've been in the dropshipping space long enough to have wasted money on things that looked good on a sales page and delivered basically nothing. So when Exposcale crossed my radar, my first instinct was the usual skepticism: another Discord group dressed up in fancy branding, run by guys who made their money selling courses about making money.
Turns out, that's not quite what's going on here.
Get free access to The Starter Blueprint and see for yourself
Exposcale is a dropshipping community founded by Max and Stefano, two operators who claim to have generated eight figures in ecommerce since 2016. That's a bold claim, and I can't audit their Shopify dashboard. But the depth of what's inside the community, and the specificity of what members describe in reviews, points to people who've actually run stores rather than people who've only ever taught running stores.
The platform sits on Whop, and the community runs through Discord. There are two tiers: a free entry-level product called The Starter Blueprint, and a paid inner circle called Scale Circle at 99 EUR per month.
The Whop store itself has been operating since 2025, which is recent. But the founders' background predates the platform by nearly a decade, so this isn't a couple of guys who started a community because they watched a YouTube video about passive income.
Here's where Exposcale separates itself from most communities immediately: you can start for free.
The Starter Blueprint includes 55+ videos covering ecommerce fundamentals, Discord access to other members, bi-weekly mindset and Q&A calls, and what they describe as everything you need to launch a first store and test products within seven days. Nearly 3,000 members have joined at this tier, which tells you the barrier to entry is genuinely low.
I've seen free communities that are basically dead channels with pinned messages from 2022. This isn't that. Members at the free tier describe the Discord as active, the chat as useful, and Stefano and Max as genuinely present on a daily basis.
If you're at the stage where you're still figuring out whether dropshipping is something you want to pursue, starting here costs you nothing but a few hours of attention.
👉 Grab free access to The Starter Blueprint here
This is where Exposcale gets genuinely interesting, and also where I want to be direct about the math.
Scale Circle runs 99 EUR per month. At the time I checked, there were 125 members inside. That's a small, deliberately contained group, which is either a feature or a limitation depending on what you're after.
The headline promise is helping you scale your store to $10k per day using Meta ads. That's an ambitious target, and I'd treat any community's income claims with appropriate skepticism. What I can speak to is the format of what's delivered.
Based on what members describe across multiple reviews, Scale Circle includes:
Multiple live calls per week covering product research, store reviews, and ad account breakdowns
Weekly Q&A sessions where Max and Stefano personally answer questions
Guest Q&As with brand owners reportedly doing eight figures per month
Daily engagement from the founders inside the Discord
That call structure is notably heavier than most communities at this price point. Most 99-per-month groups do one call a week, sometimes biweekly, and the founders are rarely in the chat between calls.
You know the feeling of paying for a mentorship and then waiting three days to hear back on a question while your ad spend is bleeding? That specific frustration comes up repeatedly in what Scale Circle members seem to be solving. One verified buyer noted they've been through "10k mentorships, multiple Discord and Skool paid communities" and called Exposcale "hands down the most valuable resource in the whole dropshipping space." That kind of comparison, from someone who's paid for the expensive alternatives, carries weight.
The creator pitch is that Max and Stefano have been in ecommerce since 2016 and have built eight-figure revenue across their stores. The community's tagline is "everything we learn, we give back."
What I can observe from the outside: they're active daily in the Discord, they run multiple calls per week personally, and they're showing up in Q&A format rather than hiding behind a team. One member who apparently knew Stefano before the community launched wrote that joining was an immediate decision once they saw him start his own community. That's the kind of trust you don't manufacture; it accumulates.
Another reviewer mentioned spending nearly 15,000 euros on two courses before finding Exposcale, and describing those as theory-heavy with no real guidance. That's a specific and painful pattern I've seen play out repeatedly in this space: you buy a course, it covers the basics competently, and then when you have an actual problem in your actual store, there's no one to ask.
The weekly call format at Scale Circle seems designed specifically to close that gap.
🔍 Read the full member reviews on Whop before deciding
Let me skip the table since both products are simple enough to compare directly.
The Starter Blueprint: Free. One-time access. 55+ videos, Discord, bi-weekly calls. No credit card required. About 2,965 members currently.
Scale Circle: 99 EUR per month, recurring. Full call suite, direct access to Max and Stefano, 125 members. Smaller and more intensive.
At the time I looked, there was no annual discount or lifetime option listed. The 99 EUR monthly is the entry point for Scale Circle, which translates to roughly $108 USD at current rates, though that fluctuates.
One member put it plainly: "Hands down the best 30 euros you'll ever spend." That quote refers to what sounds like an early pricing tier or a promotional price. Current pricing at the time I checked is 99 EUR, but it's worth verifying directly since pricing on Whop communities sometimes shifts. Some Whop products also show a welcome discount popup on first visit, so checking the page directly before committing is worth doing.
Check the current pricing on Exposcale's Whop page
If you're brand new and want to figure out whether dropshipping is viable for you, the free Starter Blueprint is a sensible place to start. No financial commitment, real content, active community.
If you're already running a store and you're stuck in the 500-to-2,000 dollar per day range, staring at your Meta ad manager every morning trying to figure out why your ROAS keeps dipping and nobody in your orbit has actually solved this problem at scale: Scale Circle seems built for that specific situation. The call structure suggests it's designed for people actively managing campaigns, not people theorizing about starting.
Scale Circle is probably not the right fit if you haven't launched a store yet and you're not ready to move quickly. The intensive call schedule implies you're bringing real questions from real situations, and if you're still pre-launch, the free tier likely covers your immediate needs.
126 reviews. 4.89 average. 116 five-star ratings. One single one-star review in the entire history of the community.
For context, a 4.89 average across 126 reviews is unusually high. Most communities in this niche hover around 4.3 to 4.6 when they accumulate significant review volume. The distribution here is almost entirely five stars, which either means the community is genuinely exceptional or there's some selection bias in who leaves reviews. Likely some of both. But you can read the actual text of member reviews and judge the specificity yourself.
See what verified buyers are saying in the Scale Circle reviews
The free tier makes this a no-risk evaluation. Start with The Starter Blueprint, spend a few days in the Discord, watch some of the videos, and decide from there whether Scale Circle makes sense for your situation.
The 99 EUR per month for Scale Circle is real money, and it should be. Communities priced too low tend to attract people who aren't serious, which degrades the quality of conversation for everyone. 125 members at this price point creates a small enough room that your questions don't get buried.
What I'd watch: the community launched in 2025. The founders have long track records, but the community itself is young. That means less historical context to draw on, though the early reviews suggest the momentum is real. I'd want to see how Scale Circle performs at 18 to 24 months in, when the initial enthusiasm of a new launch settles.
That's not a knock. It's just honest context.
The one thing I'll say clearly: if you've spent four figures on courses that gave you theory without results, a community where founders are in the Discord daily and running multiple calls per week is a fundamentally different product. The format matters as much as the content.
Join Exposcale today and start with the free Blueprint before making any bigger commitment
Quick note: dropshipping and ecommerce involve real financial risk. Ad spend can exceed revenue, especially in early testing phases. Nothing in this review is financial advice. Do your own research and don't spend money you can't afford to lose on ad budgets or paid communities.