Completing is always inland literarily

, you cannot land without coming to Canada. The both scenarios are quite common. A lot of people need to leave Canada before landing. On the other hand it's even harder to come Canada and get landed before you get your copr and get your passport stamped.
You're either playing games with semantics or talking nonsense.
-Landing at a port of entry is not landing 'inland.' It is literally a port of entry.
-You say it's 'even harder to come to Canada and get landed before you get your copr'; this is quite literally nonsense as there is a specific procedure for this. Anyone with a TRV or ETA can arrive before they get final approval and then complete the 'virtual landing' procedure in-country (after they get approved). They do not get the regular COPR but an eCOPR (and no passport 'stamping' i.e. no visa insertion). This is in fact the preferred procedure for any applicant who is in Canada when approved.
Also:
-I do not know of many cases of inland applicants leaving the country and 'landing' via the PPR/submit to consulate/COPR/visa route. I'm not saying it doesn't happen, but 'common' strikes me as a bizarre claim - the whole point of the current inland procedure is to do most of the process in Canada. Given that one can actually have their inland application cancelled (as 'abandoned') if not in the country, your claim does not make sense. Please back this claim up.
Finally: you seem to be putting the phrase "Canadian Immigration Consultant (Uncompensated/Unpaid)" in your posting signature. While as far as I can tell it may not be illegal to provide immigration advice on a non-compensated basis, I don't believe it is proper and may be illegal to give yourself the title of Canadian Immigration Consultant (a regulated profession). I'm therefore going to politely ask that you remove use of that term from your signature, as confusing and misleading to forum members.
Because, amongst other things, it implies that you know what you're talking about, and you've not demonstrated that with your post above.
If you do have some completed qualification and are a registered immigration consultant - please provide those details.
Of course, you can leave it on if you wish. But if you don't, I intend to report it to the forum owners, a law firm - and let them figure it out.