There is no information on the FortuneAds website indicating who owns or runs the business.

The FortuneAds website domain (“fortuneads.com”) was registered on the 25th of December 2014, however the domain registration is set to private.

As I researched the FortuneAds website I noticed the presence of Google Adsense ads.

Further research revealed the same Adsense account was used to display advertising on the website domain “eimimo.com”.

This domain was used to launch the business opportunity EiMimo in 2012. The scheme saw affiliates paid to view advertising and collapsed someime in early 2013.

As per EiMimo affiliate marketing presentations, the company was run by Jeff Strong:

The key consortium member/owner of Eimimo.com is Jeff Strong. He has many sites and programs on the internet.

His office is located outside of Portland, Oregon, USA. He has been actively involved in various internet ventures for the past 12 years.

Whether or not Strong is behind FortuneAds is unclear, but ads being shown via the same Adsense account as EiMimo would certainly suggest so.

As always, if a MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.

The FortuneAds Product Line

FortuneAds has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market affiliate membership with the company itself.

Once signed up, FortuneAd affiliates can then purchase various advertising ($10 – $100). This advertising is shown to other FortuneAd affiliates.

The FortuneAds Compensation Plan

The FortuneAds compensation plan revolves around signing up affiliates, viewing ads and recruiting other affiliates who do the same.

Rates for viewing ads are advertised as being “at least $0.02” (two cents) on the company website.

Recruitment commissions meanwhile are paid out using a unilevel compensation structure.

A unilevel compensation structure places an affiliate at the top of a unilevel team, with every personally recruited affiliate placed directly under them (level 1):

If any of these level 1 affiliates go on to recruit new affiliates of their own, they are placed on level of the original affiliate’s unilevel team.

If any level 2 affiliates recruit new affiliates, they are placed on level 3 and so on and so forth down a theoretical infinite number of levels.

FortuneAds cap payable unilevels at two, with commissions paid out according to how many affiliates are recruited by an affiliate and their unilevel team:

$2 for the first three personally recruited affiliates

$1 for the next four personally recruited affiliates

50 cents for every personally recruited affiliate after that and 50 cents for any affiliates your level 1 affiliates recruit (2nd level)

If any personally recruited affiliates purchase advertising from FortuneAds ($10 – $100), the company pays out a flat 5% commission.

Joining FortuneAds

Affiliate membership with FortuneAds is free.

Conclusion

With affiliates cha


🤖 Quick Answer

Who is behind FortuneAds?
FortuneAds ownership remains undisclosed on the official website. Domain registration records are private. However, research indicates the same Google Adsense account used for FortuneAds previously promoted EiMimo, an advertising-viewing scheme operated by Jeff Strong that collapsed in early 2013.

When was FortuneAds domain registered?
The FortuneAds domain (fortuneads.com) was registered on December 25, 2014. Registration details are set to private, preventing public access to ownership information through standard domain lookup databases.

What connection exists between FortuneAds and EiMimo?
Both websites share the same Google Adsense account for advertising display. EiMimo, launched in 2012 and operated by Jeff Strong, was an affiliate marketing scheme where members earned viewing advertisements. The program collapsed in


🔗 Related Articles

- ~90% of MTI investor accounts were just email addresses
- EOW move to freeze Speak Asia Supreme Court case
- Merrill drops $4 million dollar defense bid, evidence withheld
- Crypto 7 Continents Review: Global Trading Club clone Ponzi
- 4Life Review: Preferred customers = affiliates?