Ali Azlan registered My Next Aim in April 2017, just one month after The Ads Leader, an earlier adcredit scheme, began restricting withdrawals for its affiliates. This new entity appeared as The Ads Leader faced severe liquidity issues, limiting payouts to 200% of an affiliate's initial investment. The Ads Leader had launched earlier that year, promising returns up to 160% on investments ranging from $10 to $90. By mid-March, these financial strains became evident.
My Next Aim operates with little transparency. The company's website does not provide contact details for Azlan or any biographical information. The domain registration remains private, obscuring ownership details from public scrutiny. This lack of public information extends to the company itself, which offers no genuine products or services. Its affiliates market only membership in My Next Aim.
The compensation plan for My Next Aim relies entirely on recruitment. Affiliates purchase matrix positions and earn commissions by recruiting new members to do the same. No actual sales to external customers occur, and no legitimate commerce supports the payouts. Money flows upward, from new recruits to their recruiters, in a classic pyramid structure.
My Next Aim offers three distinct matrix tiers. The Dominion Matrix costs $10 per position, paying $7 for a filled position on Level 1, with payouts decreasing to $0.10 for positions on Levels 5 through 10. The Spectrum Matrix requires $100 per position, offering $80 on Level 1 and as little as $1 on deeper levels. The Victorian Matrix, priced at $300 per position, yields $255 for Level 1 placements, dropping to $1.50 at the lowest levels.
All three matrices use a 2x10 structure. Each affiliate occupies the top position, with two positions directly beneath them. These positions double with each successive level, requiring 2,016 positions to fully fill the lower levels of a single matrix. This model is mathematically unsustainable. It demands an ever-increasing number of participants, far exceeding any realistic market, to maintain payouts.
My Next Aim affiliates have actively promoted the new operation across The Ads Leader's official Facebook page. This widespread cross-promotion confirms the direct link between the two entities. The connection points to a deliberate strategy to recycle funds from one failing system into another, rather than representing a separate business venture.
This pattern of rebranding and relaunching is common when recruitment-based schemes reach their operational limits. When new money stops flowing, operators often create new names, websites, and marketing campaigns to attract fresh capital. The Ads Leader had effectively ceased viable operations by mid-2017. My Next Aim was established as a direct response to that collapse. Consumer protection agencies like the Federal Trade Commission regularly warn against schemes that prioritize recruitment over product sales, citing them as unsustainable and illegal.
