What is the shortest path from zero to millions of dollars with little to no effort?
The Internet of course.
As a follow-up and the next in a short series and what seems to be a developing theme, I plan on exposing the Money making methods for what they really are, scams.
Most of you are likely intelligent people and look at sites such as this one, and say to yourself, what sounds too good to be true, usually is. Unfortunately, people and corporations such as this know that people, in desperation to make an income, will try about anything.
I did a little research on this particular site and here is some intresting facts you might have not noticed (and a reason I am comfortable lumping them into the SCAM category).
First notice their claim to how much money you will make, or rather their wording. They use a very common marketing technique, which is not illegal by any means but in this case is used to intentionally deceive.
"Make Up To $150-$186 Per Day"
This really boils down to something quite interesting, by adding the phrase "Up To", they can make any claim they wish, s might as pick some ridiculous numbers like:
"Make Up To $15,000-$18,600 Per Day"
The problem is as time has proven, people are becoming more Internet savvy, claims of making millions of dollars with ease are less believable, so these scamers have evolved and now offer claims of only making a normal middle class income to upper class income. This is really just an attempt to get people to feel comfortable with their scam.
Next you will look at this site and notice, its only going to cost $1.95 to purchase this product, right? Wrong. Always look at the fine print. As they say, "The Devil is in the Details".
So lets have a look at the "Terms and Conditions" for this particular site. Looking at the site and wonder, where are the terms and conditions posted? I will point something rather entertaining about this, while researching this article, my screen resolution is 1920x1200, and I still had to scroll and squint my eyes to find it at the bottom of the page. Looking at the source of the page also reviled, yet another layer of attempting to deceive visitors.
Looking at the CSS shows that the web designer intentionally set the color of the hyperlinks and the background of the footer very close together as to not draw attention to them. Secondly the font size is set to 10pt, which on most higher resolution and modern monitors, is quite small. Then look at the space between the form where they want you to sign up and the actual link to the terms and conditions of the site, why would anyone (expect me looking for it), scroll down from that point?
I digress, back to the actual terms and conditions that apply.
"...following your risk-free 3-day trial to MyMoneyPlan, you'll be charged the monthly subscription fee of $49.84. You'll have 3 days from your initial signup date to access and use the MyMoneyPlan system. You'll also receive 10 days free access to SearchProfitSystem. After the initial 10 free days, you will be billed $28.71 should you choose not to cancel. After your initial risk-free trials, your subscription will automatically renew approximately every 30 days from the date you signed up..."
So lets add this up, $1.95 to sign up + $49.84 for random subscription #1 + $28.71 for Random Subscription #2 = $80.50 ! Wow, in the first month alone they plan to charge you over $80, and plan to bill you that on-going. So why the strange amounts for the multiple charges? My theory is simple, deception. When most people (myself included) review their credit card statements, amounts like $49.99 or $50.00 would stick right out on the bill, where things like $49.84 will not because it's not a normal subscription cost, so their hope really is you don't notice the charges for months and they keep taking your money.
A little background researched turned up quite a few complaints about the Utah Base MoneyMastery.com Company and all their other businesses. Just go ahead and google them, its about all you can find.
The moral of the story is, people promising you some level of income for little to no real work are usually just trying to scan people and scam they do. As for MoneyMastery.com, now you know, avoid them like the plague. Oh, don't forget, these people though in a legal gray area, are making millions.
I just saved you that aweful first $1.95, you could donate it to me, if you want