Revision Network, a company based in Nebraska, launched in 2013 with a four-tier pay-to-play product scheme. Its ownership structure remains murky, raising immediate questions about its operations.
The company's Terms and Conditions present a legal contradiction. They claim the terms are governed by California law, then immediately state that any disputes must be handled in Gage County, Nebraska courts. This creates a jurisdictional conflict, leaving members unsure of their legal rights and the applicable venue.
JPB Publications sits behind Revision Network, run by Brian Barnhouse. JPB describes itself as a "premier resource center for internet and network marketers." The company has operated as a family business since 2006, owning several websites focused on network marketing training and advertising services. Revision Network marks Barnhouse's first full-scale multilevel marketing venture.
The product structure reveals the core of its operations. Members buy into one of four tiers, each bundled with training materials and access to resources.
The Bronze level costs $19.95. It includes a video series called "Online Money Flow 2.0," which promises to show how people make money online. It also offers the "Ultimate Quickstart Guide" for network marketers and access to "Best Places to Advertise," a JPB property claiming to track ad performance across various platforms.
At the Silver tier, priced at $99.95, members gain access to audio content and an "Achieve Your Desires" e-course. One audio is labeled "Universal Laws." The poor quality of the product video makes identifying the second audio nearly impossible.
Gold membership costs $249.95. This level includes a PowerPoint e-course on direct sales tactics and a Financial Aid workbook, which supposedly teaches money management skills.
The Platinum tier costs $999.95. It grants access to US and Global Freedom Conferences, though the original marketing materials cut off before providing full details.
This tiered structure is characteristic of multilevel marketing. Members pay escalating fees to unlock what are presented as better "training" and conference access. The products instead serve as window dressing for a pass-up scheme where the company profits more from recruitment than from genuine product sales.
The product descriptions themselves remain vague. What specific lessons does the "Online Money Flow 2.0" video series teach? The advertised responses offer little detail. The Gold course promises to teach direct selling through PowerPoint. These materials lack specifics because such details would expose the fundamental weakness of the business model: a lack of real products generating value.
Revision Network's legal contradictions, undefined product line, and four-tier entry system point to a multilevel marketing operation. This structure appears designed to extract fees from participants rather than generate legitimate sales. Its focus on recruitment, tiered memberships, and vague training materials over tangible products suggests members will struggle to earn money through actual sales. Money instead flows upward through membership fees and recruitment bonuses, a structure that typically falters once recruitment slows.
