Monday, September 5, 2016

Fundising Review – Real Fundraising Business Opportunity?

Read on the Players Money blog at Fundising Review – Real Fundraising Business Opportunity? or continue reading right here:

Fundising is an MLM system that is set up as “donations” to the hierarchy of the program. Under the pretense of being donations, Fundising is a crowd sharing platform.

Fundising

The Company

Fundising has only been around for a few months. In fact, the site launched on July 25, 2016. There is no indication as to who owns or operates the website. The Alexa review does confirm that 100% of the traffic comes from Spain. This would explain why the owner can’t be contacted or that the site is set to private.

The Product

To join in on Fundising it will cost you $25. Not bad for there being no product. But if you could get 3 more people to sign up under you, you just scored $50. Yes, it would be $75, but remember you put in $25 so that doesn’t profit you in any way. Next, if your three friends find 3 friends each and so and so forth, you could be making a bit of money up to $1000. Now mind you, this is a gift sharing program. You personally give money to other members and them to you.

The Opportunity

Fundising allows you to make money by selling the membership at only $25. The system is set up in a 3 x 5 model where you can earn up to $1,000 from your downline.

The Verdict

Fundising is by far the biggest waste of your time and money. Sure the prospect of getting your money is there, but why not just asks your friend for the cash instead of having them sign up to this program.

Besides that fact that most of the traffic going to this site is from outside the United States, what really is the catcher is that you have to have a payza, payeer, or solidtrustpay accounts to send or receive money. Granted those companies might be equivalent to PayPal, but still.

Fundising is designed for the top player to win the game. And maybe with luck and time, you will end up being the top of the food chain to get the cash coming in. But it takes a lot of cheating and manipulation to get people to sign up under you. The chances of you actually making money from this site are slim to none. If you happened to be one of the few who signed up thinking that you could get paid, just chalk it up to a $25 lesson and move on.

If you are looking for a real crowdsourcing site there are plenty of them out there. Ones that help raise funds for charities and other great causes. The Fundising is all about taking money from other people who are looking for a real way to make some money. What is really sad is that even Fundising site wants you to go out and recruit charities to join the site. They want everyone you can think of to be a part of the system so that everyone is getting paid. But why not just ask those people for $25.

Another interesting thing about Fundising is that you can’t receive a refund. The money you fork over goes directly from your account to the up line you signed up under. The site doesn’t hold on to or store any funds and the minute you sign up and send off your payment, it’s gone.

Please don’t fall for this site. Do your research, read the fine print and steer clear.  This isn’t a verified way to make any money. You would have better luck just asking for the $25 than trying to get people to sign up under you. You shouldn’t trust overseas accounts or sites similar to PayPal without verifying that they are legit.

Last, of all, any site that is set up with a 3 x 5 compensation plan should be dealt with extreme caution. Sure there are plenty of sites you can go to that have the same structure, but at least they have something for you to sell to make money. With Fundising all you’re selling in the membership and false hopes. Just save yourself time and money and just don’t go down this route.

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