The Big Dollar Forced Matrix, or BigD4u, promotes itself as a multi-level marketing scheme that prevents recruitment stalls. Its website provides no corporate details. Domain registration for bigd4u.com points to a serviced apartment at the Kantary Bay Hotel in Rayong, Thailand, under the name 'baldonanza'.
BigD4u offers no tangible products. Members receive advertising credits for an internal ad network. Upon joining, members get 7,000 banner credits and 7,000 text ad credits. The company does not explain the value of these credits on its network.
Members cannot buy advertising credits separately. They become available only with a BigD4u membership.
The company's main marketing point claims all members work to fill "the same matrix." This suggests a single, unified matrix for everyone. BigD4u uses 2x2 matrices, each holding six members.
The system does not use one large matrix. BigD4u's matrices operate like any other company's matrix system. The difference lies in how BigD4u allocates matrix spots. The system prioritizes filling the oldest matrices first. This design intends to prevent members from getting stuck in inactive matrices.
BigD4u matrix dynamics are standard. Members earn a $15 commission when they "cycle out." Cycling out recycles the member back into the system, assigning them a new matrix to fill.
Joining BigD4u requires a one-time fee of $7.
Internal advertising networks in MLM often fill with promotions for similar deals. BigD4u members promote to other BigD4u members, gaining no exposure outside the company. The advertising on this network holds little value.
The "same matrix" drawcard eliminates dead matrices within the system. But two fundamental problems remain. The system relies entirely on new recruits to generate commissions. This makes BigD4u a money game where new membership fees fund commissions.
The second problem relates to scale. As BigD4u grows, filling older matrices takes longer. This delays cycles for newer members. Traditionally, strong recruiters cycle faster. BigD4u's queuing system means new recruiters must help earlier members cycle first.
This queuing system will likely frustrate new recruits as the company expands. Losing many new recruits without seeing a cycle can quickly become disheartening. The Big Dollar Forced Matrix will stall if recruitment stops, regardless of its queuing system. There are only so many people available to recruit into such an opportunity.
