Tom, the self-proclaimed administrator of Quick Cash Ads, admitted in an online forum that he lost thousands in previous scam investment schemes. He then decided to launch his own operation, which promises a 133% return on investment without disclosing its ownership or any verifiable business activity.
The Quick Cash Ads website keeps its ownership details secret. No names appear on the site, offering no transparency or accountability. The domain quickcashads.com registered on August 15, 2012, but its registration details remain privately locked.
A YouTube marketing video for the scheme features David Lockwood, a figure known for promoting dubious operations. Lockwood has previously endorsed at least seven other questionable ventures. These include Daily Profit Always, a 250% ROI Ponzi scheme, Wealth 4 All Team, an alleged 10-day ROI Ponzi, and Alert 2 Pay, which promised returns in 30 days. He also promoted Fast Cash Mega, a Ponzi/pyramid hybrid, along with Profit Clicking, The Golden Path, and Unstoppable WhirlWind, both recruitment scams.
Tom's remarkable confession detailed significant losses as a participant in multiple Ponzi schemes. He listed $3,900 in withdrawals from one scheme, $27,000 from another, and $1,000 from a third. He referred to these financial setbacks as his "dirty laundry" in an online forum post.
Instead of stepping away from such schemes, Tom devised a plan with a friend. They discussed the money they believed was owed to them from their failed investments. This led them to a new question: what if they ran one of these programs themselves? Quick Cash Ads was then created.
Tom's reasoning was simple. He had learned a painful lesson from his past losses. But it was not the lesson of avoiding scams entirely. Tom concluded that operating these schemes was more profitable than participating in them as a member.
Quick Cash Ads offers no actual products or services. Members do not purchase anything tangible. They buy memberships to the company itself. Once inside, participants can purchase "shares" at $1.50 each. Quick Cash Ads describes these as "a divided up unit of the value of a company," bundling each share with advertising credits for an in-house ad network on its website.
The compensation plan reveals the scheme's true nature. For every $1.50 share purchased, Quick Cash Ads guarantees a $2.00 return. This equates to a 133% ROI. The company promises this return "over time," a vague phrase lacking specific timelines. No real business generates this money. There is no legitimate revenue stream or income source. Returns paid to early investors come directly from funds deposited by new recruits.
This is a textbook Ponzi structure. Quick Cash Ads cycles money from newer participants to older ones, promising unsustainable returns. The scheme will inevitably collapse. Everyone joins hoping to be among the few who cash out before the crash.
Tom lost thousands before he understood the game. Now he runs it. Quick Cash Ads exists to transfer money from people seeking easy returns into the pockets of Tom and his unnamed partner.
