Mary Grace Oloya Cezar is listed as the registered owner of Rapid Growth Online Marketing, a Philippine company promising investors up to 80% guaranteed returns on capital within 12 months. The Philippine Department of Trade and Industry confirmed the company's incorporation on March 8, 2017, but details surrounding its operations remain obscured.
Rapid Growth Online Marketing keeps its true operators hidden. No ownership information appears on its website. Domain records show Kevin Campbell registered the site on March 10, 2017, using a London address. This address functions as a virtual office, shared by many other businesses. Campbell himself has no public profile or verifiable link to the company.
A blurry incorporation certificate on the website names Mary Grace Oloya Cezar as the owner. While the DTI confirmed the incorporation date, Cezar's connection to Campbell or the company's daily operations is unknown. The website targets Filipino investors exclusively, prices services in Philippine Pesos, and lists a Cavite address. The London details appear fabricated. This suggests a local operation pretending to have UK credentials.
The company offers a mangosteen extract supplement, sold in 60-capsule bottles for about $32. Mangosteen does have traditional medicinal uses. But the product itself is not available for retail purchase through the company. It exists primarily as a pretext for the core business model.
That model promises returns that defy economic reality. Investors can deposit up to 3 million pesos, roughly $60,000. They are then guaranteed a payout of 4.08 million pesos, or about $81,000, after 12 months.
Investment tiers vary by size. A 500,000 peso deposit promises monthly payments of 10,000 pesos for a year, plus a car. Larger investments of 1 million, 2 million, or 3 million pesos scale up the monthly returns and include more expensive vehicles.
A matrix-based commission structure sits beneath these ROI promises. Affiliates earn "group commissions" through a 3x10 matrix. This multi-level marketing architecture rewards recruitment of new investors over actual product sales.
This setup defines Ponzi territory. The promised returns are too high. Ownership is hidden. The product acts as window dressing. The compensation plan prioritizes bringing in new money over selling anything real. Early investors receive payments sourced from later recruits' cash. When new recruitment slows, the scheme collapses.
The combination of secrecy, impossible returns, and car bonuses to create social proof has been seen before. These elements aim to generate fear of missing out among potential recruits. Different names and countries appear, but the underlying trap remains the same.
When growth stops, the scheme has no underlying business to sustain payouts. Money simply moves from late investors to early ones. The Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) often issues advisories against such unregistered investment platforms.
