Rodney Brace is still running the same game, just with a different name.

Visit the Premier Income Plan website without an affiliate referral link and you automatically land under Rodney Brace as the founder. The operation is owned by Hyphen Tech Inc., a Newfoundland-based company that Brace runs himself. On paper, Hyphen Tech claims to be "a product-driven company offering the BEST online communication products in the Industry." In reality, it's the same playbook Brace has been working for over a decade.

Back in 2013, Brace first appeared on BehindMLM as the admin behind All Teamed Up, a matrix cycler pyramid scheme that promised $7,000 a month returns on a $25 monthly investment. That scheme is long dead. Premier Income Plan is what comes next.

The structure tells you everything. Premier Income Plan has no actual products to sell. Affiliates pay $59 a month for access to communication tools—a video conference platform, chat app, audio and video email service, and testimonial manager. Those tools aren't what drive the business. Recruitment is.

Affiliates earn money by signing up other people. They get $10 for recruiting the first two people, then $15 for everyone after that. But the real money comes from what those recruits do next.

There's a residual commission system built on a 3×9 matrix structure. The math works like this: you sit at the top, with three positions beneath you. Those three spawn nine positions below them. That pattern repeats down nine levels, creating thousands of positions that theoretically fill up as people recruit downline. Starting from the second month a recruited affiliate pays their $59 fee, commissions flow upward based on matrix positions filled.

There's also an additional layer of residual recruitment commissions that chain downward. If you recruit two people, you collect $10 on every third person they recruit, and on every third person their recruits bring in—as long as it keeps flowing through that first two-person tier.

The math doesn't work for most people. In a 3×9 matrix, only those at the very top benefit while everyone else scrambles to recruit enough bodies to fill positions beneath them. The system requires constant new recruitment to sustain itself. When that well runs dry, it collapses.

Brace has been at this for years, and he's refined the operation. Where All Teamed Up promised absurd returns on minimal investment, Premier Income Plan wraps itself in the language of communication products and affiliate opportunity. The core mechanism remains unchanged: people pay money, they recruit others to pay money, and commissions flow upward based on how deep the pyramid goes.

The tools are real. The commission structure is clear. But there's no sustainable business here—only a system designed to reward the person at the top who controls all the referral links.


🤖 Quick Answer

Who is Rodney Brace and what is his connection to Premier Income Plan?
Rodney Brace is the founder of Premier Income Plan, operating through Hyphen Tech Inc., a Newfoundland-based company. He has been involved in similar ventures since 2013, previously running All Teamed Up, a matrix cycler pyramid scheme promising $7,000 monthly returns on $25 investments.

What is the business model of Premier Income Plan?
Premier Income Plan operates under Hyphen Tech Inc., which presents itself as a product-driven online communication company. However, it follows a comparable structure to Brace's previous schemes, utilizing matrix cycling mechanisms to generate returns.

What was All Teamed Up and how does it relate to Premier Income Plan?
All Teamed Up was Brace's 2013 pyramid scheme promising $7,000 monthly returns on $25


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