Fred Duterte, a "founding affiliate" for Fast Profits Daily, now offers to pay new members' enrollment fees. This strategy highlights the business's urgent need for recruits, a push revealed in a recent email from Duterte to prospective participants.

The Fast Profits Daily model requires a constant influx of new participants for existing members to receive payouts. Without fresh sign-ups filling the lower levels of its Fast 1 and Fast 2 matrices, those in higher payout positions wait indefinitely for their turns. This core dependency has driven members to intense recruitment efforts.

Now, simply finding new members is not enough. To ensure commissions keep flowing, current Fast Profits Daily members are offering to cover the initial membership costs for prospects. Duterte's email simplifies the scheme: "Join for as little as $50 – request 2 people you want to benefactor ($100) and relax and enjoy the ride!"

He further explains the process for those struggling to find recruits. "If you need help with 2 referrals, we have help for you," Duterte wrote. "We carry a list of people who want to be part of FPD but have exhausted all funds. If you are willing to pay their membership – then, our upline leaders are willing to send you 2 referrals or 1 whatever you need."

Fast Profits Daily membership costs either $50 or $250. This raises questions about the legitimacy of a "list" of people who supposedly want to join but have no funds, awaiting a benefactor. The business already uses a heavily recruitment-focused structure. Now, members are entering the questionable territory of paying for others to join a program they cannot afford. These new, subsidized members will then need to recruit others themselves, or depend on commissions from further recruits, to make any money.

While Fast Profits Daily claims to cost nothing to join on its retail side, this new tactic appears designed solely to inflate membership numbers and maximize recruitment commissions. The promise of $35,000 from the final Overdrive matrix is tempting. But reaching that figure demands hundreds of downline members, each requiring substantial recruitment efforts of their own.

It remains unclear if Fast Profits Daily management approved this specific marketing strategy. As a "founding affiliate," Duterte likely discussed it with them. The company itself seems unconcerned by these practices. It is also probable that Duterte and his team are not the only ones using this approach, given the inherent pressure in the model.

The ethical and legal implications of recruiting people into a business by paying their way, based on a promise of future earnings they cannot afford to pursue independently, remain a significant concern.