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You are offered the opportunity of a
lifetime. Join this particular scheme
for a small amount of money. As new
members join they will start sending
money to you.
This is a pyramid scam. Pyramid scams
cost people a lot of money. A pyramid
scam starts with a few people and
spreads outwards to many people, who
then send money back up the pyramid. The
only people who make money are the
people at the top of the pyramid.
Example
This scheme depends on each participant recruiting 6 new members
into the scheme. The figure below shows how many people will need to
have joined the scheme at each level, in order for those above to be
paid.
1 6
2 36
3 216
4 1,296
5 7,776
6 46,656
7 279,936
8 1,679,616
9 10,077,696
10 60,466,176
11 362,797,056
12 2,176,782,336
13 13,060,694,016
The total population of the world is approximately 6.2 billion so
after only 13 levels there's not enough people on the planet to keep
the scheme going.
Pyramid schemes turn their members into
scammers. Once you have sent away your
fees to the person who recruited you,
the only way for you to get more money
is to recruit others and convince them
to part with their money too.
This is different from genuine
multi-level marketing, where people make
money from the sale of products and
services, not from the cash involved in
recruiting new members.
Some pyramid schemes do try to disguise
themselves as multi-level marketing, by
tying the sale of products into the
offer. However, these products are
usually of poor quality, overpriced and
hard to sell. Other pyramid schemes
posing as multi-level marketing may dupe
their members into spending a great deal
of money on training materials, like
books and tapes.
You could be recruited into a pyramid
scheme at a seminar, home meeting, over
the phone or by letter or email.
The only way for a pyramid to work for
everyone is if there is an endless
supply of new members. There isn't -
it's a mathematical impossibility.
Variations:
Chain Letters
A letter arrives promising that for very
little cost you will be showered with
money, good luck or some other benefit.
All you have to do is send a small
amount of money to everyone listed in
the letter. Then, put your name on the
list and send out the letter to as many
people as you can. By doing this, the
letter says you will receive a large
amount of money or luck in a short space
of time.
It is sometimes stated that if you don't
send the letter, you'll not only miss
out on the money, but you'll also have
bad luck.
With a chain letter, you lose money in
two ways:
- sending money to the scammers
who sent you the letter and
- wasted time
and money spent on postage and
photocopying.
The letters will sometimes say 'this is
not a scam' or 'this is not a pyramid
scheme'. It is.
Don't scam your friends and relatives by
getting them involved in something like
this.
Stay Safe
Don't let anyone pressure you into making decisions about
money.
Decide whether this offer is a pyramid
scam or a genuine multi-level marketing
business. Do the products and services
impress you? Will you be able to sell
them? Is the business' success dependent
on sales, rather than the costs of
belonging to the business - like fees
and training materials? If the answers
are 'no', keep safe by steering clear.
Don't respond to a chain letter. Just
ignore it. You will not receive a lot of
money. The mathematics of the pyramid
are against you. Only the original
scammers make money.
Pyramid selling schemes are prohibited under the Fair Trading
Act.
If you have been approached to join, what you suspect to be a pyramid selling
scheme, we suggest you inform the Commerce Commission.
The
Fair Trading Act is enforced
by the Commerce Commission.
Help Keep Others Safe:
If you have received this kind of offer
and you believe it is a scam rather than
a genuine multi-level marketing
business, please share your story
here.
We will treat your email in the
strictest confidence and remove your personal
details before posting your story on our
site.
More:
Remember that your friends and family
already in the pyramid may not realise
they are being scammed. They will be
hoping for a big payoff soon to come,
and they naturally want you to benefit
from it too. The payoff will never come.

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