C
Chord of Souls
Guest
octopustravelclub.com - a "good" pyramid scheme?
I received a link from an acquaintance about [broken link removed]
At first I dismissed it as yet another pyramid scam but on examination I suspect with horror that it may have some merit. I'm ignoring the end product (holidays and travel bookings) as I've no idea how good / bad / indifferent the actual travel agent is. But that not's my point.
The trouble with most pyramid schemes is tht they promise countless millions to gullible or greedy souls by suggesting that there is no limit to the number of levels at which you can get paid. Eventually the number of levels becomes unsustainable and the pyramid collapses.
This crowd offer a 2% commission on the sale with a maximum limit of five levels between you and the end buyer. So on each sale there's a potential five introducers to be paid commission, or 10% total commission. This actually seems like a viable business model.
What do others think?
P.S. - In case this reads like a veiled plug to sign up loads of members for my own benefit, it's not. I cannot benefit even if millions of AAM posters sign up as the Octopus Club could not identify me as the introducer. And I have no connection with the company as a whole. I'm just curious to see if anyone else thinks ths is actually a viable "pyramid" scheme.
I received a link from an acquaintance about [broken link removed]
At first I dismissed it as yet another pyramid scam but on examination I suspect with horror that it may have some merit. I'm ignoring the end product (holidays and travel bookings) as I've no idea how good / bad / indifferent the actual travel agent is. But that not's my point.
The trouble with most pyramid schemes is tht they promise countless millions to gullible or greedy souls by suggesting that there is no limit to the number of levels at which you can get paid. Eventually the number of levels becomes unsustainable and the pyramid collapses.
This crowd offer a 2% commission on the sale with a maximum limit of five levels between you and the end buyer. So on each sale there's a potential five introducers to be paid commission, or 10% total commission. This actually seems like a viable business model.
What do others think?
P.S. - In case this reads like a veiled plug to sign up loads of members for my own benefit, it's not. I cannot benefit even if millions of AAM posters sign up as the Octopus Club could not identify me as the introducer. And I have no connection with the company as a whole. I'm just curious to see if anyone else thinks ths is actually a viable "pyramid" scheme.