Nicholas Granger, from Brooklyn, New York, operates Power Cash Infinity, a suspected pyramid scheme. Domain registration records identified Granger through a Skype handle, nicholas.granger29, found in the website's FAQ. This venture follows Granger's earlier multi-level marketing scheme, The Power of 31, which sold $225 candles with a cancer survivor narrative.
Power Cash Infinity sells only membership. Members receive access to a Private Resell Rights library, some website advertising credits, and unspecified "digital downloads." The company offers advertising directly to customers, but members themselves cannot sell advertising. Their role involves recruiting new members.
The compensation plan relies entirely on recruitment. Power Cash Infinity uses a "1-up" system. After joining and paying a fee, a member's first recruit passes their commission directly to the upline. The new member earns nothing from this initial signup. Subsequent recruits, however, generate direct payments. When those recruits make their first signup, that commission rolls up to the original member. This commission chain extends indefinitely.
Paid members receive $10 for each new recruit. Free members can also recruit, but they earn only $5 per paid signup. This structure pressures individuals to pay the membership fee to double their potential earnings.
The company's membership fee pricing is inconsistent. The website displays three different amounts: $11.50, $12.50, and $11. No explanation clarifies which price is correct. This discrepancy suggests either disorganization or intentional obfuscation.
This operation shows signs of carelessness. The company logo uses an incorrect name. The conflicting membership prices appear without explanation on the same page. These issues are not typical errors for a legitimate, growing business. They point to a quickly built scheme, designed to take money from recruits before it inevitably fails.
Most participants in Power Cash Infinity are structured to fail. Pyramid schemes inherently profit those at the top from those below. As new members join lower in the chain, their chances of earning money drop significantly. The low $11.50 entry fee encourages high recruitment volumes. But when recruitment inevitably slows, participants lose their money. Nicholas Granger and the earliest joiners then collect their profits before the scheme collapses.
