WorldVentures response to Rwanda declaring
the company was an illegal pyramid scheme
was certainly strange.
Rather than prove it wasn’t a pyramid scheme, WorldVentures brushed off the ban by claiming it didn’t do business in Rwanda.
This caught the attention of several Brazilian WorldVentures affiliates. Because despite Brazil not appearing on WorldVentures list of authorized countries, business in Brazil is booming.
According to WorldVentures own Policies and Procedures (section 4.18);
Because of critical legal and tax considerations, WorldVentures must limit the sale of WorldVentures products and services, and the presentation of the WorldVentures business to prospective customers and Representatives located within the United States or one of the countries where World Ventures is currently operating until further notice.
Accordingly,
Representatives are authorized to sell WorldVentures products and services, and enroll customers and Representatives only in the countries in which WorldVentures is authorized to conduct business
, as announced in official Company literature.
You may find a list of markets in which WorldVentures currently conducts business, along with any restrictions for each market, in the back office.
The list of markets WorldVentures currently conducts business in, as provided to affiliates, is as follows;
The US, Austria, Botswana, Canada, Cyprus, Germany, the UK, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Israel, Kenya, Malta, the Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, Singapore, South Africa, Slovenia, Zimbabwe, Puerto Rico, Australia, New Zealand, Iceland, Ireland, Malaysia, Poland, Serbia, Taiwan, Romania, Jamaica, Uganda, Guam, Colombia, Latvia and the Czech Republic.
For any country not on the list (deemed an “unauthorized country”), WorldVentures’ Policies and Procedures states;
No Representative may, in any unauthorized country and in any manner unauthorized in the then-current open markets list in the back office:
(a) conduct sales, enrollment or training meetings;
(b) enroll or attempt to enroll potential customers or Representatives; or
(c) conduct any other activity for the purpose of selling WorldVentures products, establishing a Marketing Organization, or promoting the WorldVentures opportunity.
With Brazil not appearing on WorldVentures list, we can safely assume two things;
WorldVentures is not authorized to conduct business in Brazil and;
any WorldVentures affiliates caught conducting business in Brazil (selling and/or recruiting) will be punished as per the company’s Policies and Procedures
As with Rwanda, WorldVentures appears to be turning a blind eye to clear evidence of business operations taking place in Brazil.
Troy Brown has been a top earner in WorldVentures for some time. In marketing material published on WorldVentures’ official corporate Facebook page two months ago, Brown is cited as a “quadruple IMD”:
IMD stands for “International Marketing Director” and is the top affiliate rank within the company.
🤖 Quick Answer
Is WorldVentures operating legally in Brazil?WorldVentures does not list Brazil among its officially authorized countries, yet significant business operations occur there. According to the company's Policies and Procedures section 4.18, WorldVentures restricts product sales and business presentations in unauthorized jurisdictions due to legal and tax considerations. This discrepancy raises questions about regulatory compliance in the Brazilian market.
Why did WorldVentures' Rwanda response concern Brazilian affiliates?
WorldVentures dismissed Rwanda's illegal pyramid scheme declaration by claiming non-operation in that country. This defensive strategy alarmed Brazilian representatives because their nation similarly lacks official authorization, yet business operations flourish there, suggesting potential inconsistency in regulatory compliance and enforcement across different markets.
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