Ad Marketing Made Easy claims its operations are based in Hong Kong, listing an address at 31/F., Chinachem Century Tower, 178 Gloucester Road, Wanchai. This address, however, traces back to NorthWestern Management Services, a company formation outfit. The arrangement suggests Ad Marketing Made Easy operates as a shell entity in Hong Kong, lacking any genuine physical presence or substantive business operations.

The company's website, goamme.com, provides no information about its operators or management team. A private registration in March 2017 further obscures who controls the scheme. This anonymity makes holding anyone accountable nearly impossible for participants. Financial regulators globally issue consistent warnings against investing in ventures that hide their leadership and true location. Such setups often exploit jurisdictional gaps, making enforcement challenging for authorities like the Securities and Exchange Commission or the Federal Trade Commission in the U.S.

Ad Marketing Made Easy sells no retail products or services to the general public. Instead, its "advertising services" are limited to displaying ads to other affiliates already within the system. This model creates an internal exchange with no external value, typical of a Ponzi structure where a legitimate product is absent. Affiliates do not generate revenue from external advertising sales. The entire business model depends solely on the recruitment of new participants.

Affiliates purchase "AdPack Coins" for $50 each, with a maximum investment of $25,000 allowed at once. These investments come with a promise of "cashback" returns. The company states payouts occur after 700 days, but offers no fixed percentage. Its terms explicitly claim the "CASHBACK BONUS is not fixed and varies from time to time and affiliate to affiliate." Ad Marketing Made Easy LTD. retains "complete discretionary rights" over all payouts. This clause allows the operators to arbitrarily decide whether and when to pay, a hallmark of fraudulent schemes designed to avoid financial obligations. The long waiting period for returns also serves to delay the inevitable collapse, keeping investors hoping for an payout that may never materialize.

The compensation plan pays affiliates for recruiting new investors through a unilevel structure spanning seven potential levels. Direct recruits, those personally brought into the scheme (Level 1), earn a 10% commission. Recruits on Level 2 generate an 8% commission. While the company lists Levels 3 through 7, it provides no payout percentages or specific qualification criteria for these deeper tiers. Mentions of "Leadership Monthly Qualification Bonuses" also lack any detail, leaving participants uninformed about how to achieve them or what they entail.

This opaque system relies entirely on a continuous influx of new money from new investors. The company's attempt to block visitors from the United States and Canada from its website is a superficial gesture. Such measures are often employed by these schemes to appear compliant with specific national regulations, while continuing to operate illegally elsewhere. These actions do not alter the fundamental mechanics of a Ponzi operation; they merely shift the target audience.

When recruitment inevitably slows, the scheme faces collapse. The fine print states, "Ad Marketing Made Easy LTD. has complete right to decide when will it payout." This grants anonymous operators the power to simply cease payments without any legal recourse for participants. Any balance shown in a participant's backoffice after 700 days was never actual, redeemable money. The vast majority of people involved in such schemes lose their entire investment. The mathematical reality of a Ponzi scheme guarantees this outcome. Victims of anonymous online investment scams can report the activity to their national financial fraud authorities, such as the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) or the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK.