Ranjit Kaur Cooner launched MaxeniumAds on July 1st, 2013, selling $25 "advertising packages" in what appears to be a pyramid scheme. The Birmingham-based company claims to operate an advertising business, but offers no genuine product or service.

The firm's website displays a UK certificate of incorporation for "Max Xenium Pool LTD." This document can be purchased online for £15 with same-day service. Company records show MaxeniumAds previously operated as "Every Hour Income Limited."

That earlier venture changed its registration on April 4th, 2013. It used the now-defunct domain everyhourincome.biz and collapsed in June 2013. Cooner marketed an affiliate recruitment scheme through this operation, disguised as a blog subscriber service. The pitch involved recruiting someone, who then bought upgrades for 3,000 "instant subscribers." Recruiters earned commissions when their sign-ups enrolled others.

Cooner's only documented prior industry work was as an affiliate for That Free Thing, a "free stuff" MLM launched in 2011. Her corporate biography claims "extensive experience in the mobile industry, internet marketing and advertising." The record shows otherwise.

MaxeniumAds sells no actual products. Affiliates simply buy $25 "advertising packages" to access advertising credits. These credits are supposedly displayed on the company website. There is nothing retailable, and no value is exchanged with the outside world.

The compensation structure makes the scheme clear. Each $25 package creates two positions: an "adpack" and a "cycler." Adpacks promise up to 2 percent daily returns over 100 days. Sixty percent of each $25 purchase, or $15 per position, enters a pool distributed as daily returns. Members must reinvest 30 percent of this daily payout into more advertising packages. Cycler positions generate small payouts each time someone buys another package and mature once they reach 250 percent value. All cyclers line up in a queue waiting their turn.

Money flows from new recruits buying packages, not from actual advertising services sold to customers. Affiliates make money by getting others to buy packages. They perform no genuine business function. The "advertising credits" and "daily returns" are theater. Signing up more people is the actual business.

This identical structure destroyed Every Hour Income Limited. MaxeniumAds recreated that model under a different name and with adjusted promises. Cooner simply repositioned the same failing system and relaunched it.

The company requires constant recruitment to sustain the promised returns. Eventually, recruitment exhausts itself. When new buyers stop, cyclers cease maturing, daily ROI payments halt, and later affiliates lose their money. This is not an advertising business; it is a cyclical collapse waiting to happen.