Wazzub announced plans for its "Perfect App" mobile application, targeting an October 1, 2013 launch. This marks another attempt by the company, which previously collapsed in 2011 after failing to deliver on promises of a "do-everything" search portal tied to a profit-sharing compensation plan.
Wazzub launched with significant hype, but generated almost no real revenue. The company missed several self-imposed commission payment deadlines after its initial rollout. It essentially ceased operations.
But Wazzub did not disappear entirely. It rebranded as PerfectInternet. The company then pursued various attempts to find a viable business model, trying lotteries, ebooks, online games, and even a global talent show for affiliates. None of these efforts proved successful.
Now, the company tries again. Wazzub recently posted a splash page for the "Perfect App." Its marketing copy mirrors common mobile app pitches: "five billion people own mobile phones," it states, "and five billion people want to earn money using them." Wazzub claimed "A group of experts is developing the PERFECT APP."
The app itself appears to function as a mobile interface for the existing PerfectInternet search portal. Users reportedly earn money by simply using the free application. Recruiting others to use it promises further earnings from their subsequent activity.
Wazzub's compensation structure details a five-level unilevel plan. Commissions depend on user interaction. A test run on the company's "creepy genie" calculator, a recruiting predictor tool, showed the scale required. To reach $1,000 in monthly income, a user would need to recruit at least seven free members. Each of those members would then need to recruit seven more, five generations deep. This chain totals roughly 16,800 people feeding commissions up to the top earner.
At the bottom of its "creepy genie" page, Wazzub included a disclaimer. It read: "As in real life, you never know if a fortune-teller is telling the truth."
