Mfinity Global Review: Bulavita reboot comes up short
Mfinity Global just launched from the ashes of Bulavita, which collapsed last month. But the company's murky ownership and resistance to transparency suggest the reboot may already be troubled.
The backstory is a tangled mess. LaCore Enterprises bought Wakaya Perfection in late 2019, then quietly launched Bulavita under its ownership. For months, nothing much happened. Then in April 2021, Bulavita partnered with Juuva. Two months later, they cut ties. What's left became Mfinity Global.
Here's the problem: Mfinity Global's website says nothing about who owns or operates the company. The marketing announcement last month revealed that Todd Smith and Bill Andreoli are running things—but you'd never know it from the official site. This lack of basic transparency didn't start with Mfinity Global. It runs back through Juuva, LaCore Enterprises, and all the way to Wakaya Perfection, where founder David Gilmour's involvement was never properly disclosed.
Nobody knows whether Mfinity Global has silent partners or hidden ownership structures. The company refuses to say.
Mfinity Global sells nutrition products, fat loss supplements, and skincare items, all priced at premium levels. The ginger and turmeric capsules run $45 per bottle. Their detox and energy powders cost between $51.40 and $57.85. A single ounce of face cream retails for $64.30. The coffee blend, Kofi, goes for $55.30 per tub.
What really matters, though, is how distributors make money—or don't. Mfinity Global refuses to publish its compensation plan on its website. The only details available came from a Bill Andreoli presentation in early June. The company operates ten affiliate ranks, but without public access to the full plan, it's impossible to independently verify whether these ranks are achievable or whether recruitment drives commissions more than actual product sales.
This is classic MLM behavior. Companies that hide their compensation plans do so because the numbers don't hold up under scrutiny. If most people made real money selling products, they'd publish those figures loudly and proudly.
Mfinity Global's silence on ownership, its refusal to disclose the compensation plan, and its history of opacity across multiple corporate incarnations paint a clear picture. This isn't a company interested in earning trust through transparency. It's a company hoping nobody asks hard questions.
The reboot may have new branding, but the problems are old. Until Mfinity Global publishes its full compensation plan and clearly discloses all ownership and management, potential distributors should assume this is another vehicle designed to benefit those at the top while leaving most participants empty-handed.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is Mfinity Global and its connection to previous companies?Mfinity Global is a recently launched multilevel marketing company that emerged from Bulavita's collapse in 2024. Bulavita itself was owned by LaCore Enterprises and had previously partnered with Juuva before discontinuing that relationship, eventually rebranding as Mfinity Global under new management.
Who operates Mfinity Global according to available information?
Todd Smith and Bill Andreoli were identified as running Mfinity Global following the company's launch announcement. However, this information does not appear on the official company website, raising questions about transparency and disclosure practices within the organization's public communications.
What concerns have been raised about Mfinity Global's transparency?
The company's website provides no disclosed information regarding ownership or operational structure. The absence of leadership details from official channels, combined with the troubled history of predecessor
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