A Wisconsin woman's name sits on the paperwork for a $14.95 matrix scheme launched in 2014, but she says she's not running it.

Perpetual Quik Start went live in mid-to-late 2014 under the ownership of Clinton Clark and Margaret Albright, according to the company's anti-spam policy. The domain perpetualquikstart.com was registered July 9, 2014, with Albright listed as the owner. Her address in Wisconsin was provided in the registration.

Albright's personal website uses the same name servers that power Perpetual Quik Start. Her site features testimonials about her online earnings and promises that she doesn't "cheat or steal or lie to make my money."

She details her eBay experience, how selling on the platform consumed so much time that quitting her day job only swapped one full-time job for another. That frustration, she explained, led her to launch sites like Perpetual Quik Start.

But on June 30, 2015, Albright contacted this publication to dispute her ownership role. She claimed she worked with Clark for about a year, an arrangement that ended in March 2014. "The fact that my name is still on his sites does not make me an owner, it simply means he did not remove my name," she said. "Perpetual QUIK Start domain name is registered to me because I bought the name and built the site for Clinton. I do not own that site."

The timing of her statement—more than a year after the domain registration and months after the scheme launched—raises questions about when she actually stepped back from the operation.

Albright's portfolio of online ventures tells its own story. Her website advertises The 7 Day Success Plan, a $12.99-a-month recruitment scheme formerly called "The 7K Team System." She also promotes Success Quik, a multi-tier recruitment operation with entry points ranging from $10 to $5,000. Additional offerings include Referraler, billed as a "downline building program," plus PTC Advantage and Escalating Biz—both downline builder sites designed to funnel participants into third-party opportunities.

This pattern mirrors Perpetual Quik Start's own structure. The scheme operates as a matrix cycler with no actual products or services for affiliates to sell. Members pay $14.95 to enter the system, with the entire mechanism built around recruiting new participants rather than selling anything of tangible value.

The Safe Ad Zone brand appears connected to this network, though it's described on its website as a filtering system "Designed to Filter OUT Ponzi Schemes, Money Games and Mathematically Illogical Program, Projects Websites and Systems." The irony is difficult to ignore given what the sites actually do.

Whether Albright remains involved or not, her name and infrastructure continue supporting operations that follow the mathematical impossibility inherent to all matrix schemes: endless recruitment requirements that cannot be sustained. The domain remains registered to her. The name servers still point to her personal website. And the scheme continues operating under the system she says she built.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Perpetual Quik Start and when was it launched?
Perpetual Quik Start is a $14.95 matrix cycler scheme that launched in mid-to-late 2014. The domain was registered July 9, 2014, under ownership listed as Clinton Clark and Margaret Albright. The company operates through a matrix structure requiring participant investments at the specified entry price point.

Who is Margaret Albright in relation to Perpetual Quik Start?
Margaret Albright, a Wisconsin resident, is listed as the domain owner on perpetualquikstart.com's registration documents. However, she claims she is not operating the scheme. Her personal website shares the same nameservers as Perpetual Quik Start and features testimonials about online earnings and eBay selling experience.


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