Royal Job Desk markets itself as an IT company offering jobs and products, but it requires membership fees ranging from $177 to $691. This operation, which claims to be the "member referral program" for Royal Ekutir Technology, operates with no verifiable leadership and uses fake domain registrations.

Both Royal Job Desk and Royal Ekutir Technology websites provide almost no information on who runs them. Names for a leadership team are absent.

The getjobdesk.com domain registration tells a different story. Records show the site registered to "Google Enterprises Private Limited" and a "Gabriel Ben Dann." Neither name appears elsewhere online. Google has no connection to such a private company. Ben Dann holds no searchable record. The listed address in Noida, Uttar Pradesh, is real, but the registrant details appear fabricated.

Royalekutir.com, in contrast, keeps its domain registration private. This lack of transparency is a common warning sign in industries prone to schemes.

The products Royal Job Desk claims to sell remain deliberately vague. Its lists include "IT Solutions," "Offers and Promotions," "Merchandise," and an "E-Education Program." No specific details exist for any of these offerings. This serves as window dressing for a recruitment scheme.

Further deception comes from the Royal Ekutir website. It states, "we have only one official website under the name of www.royalekutir.com. We are not connected or linked with any other website." Yet Royal Job Desk promotes itself as Royal Ekutir's official referral program. These statements directly contradict each other. It remains unclear if Royal Job Desk actually provides any products or if it only recruits members under false pretenses.

Members must pay between 9,000 and 35,000 rupees, roughly $177 to $691, to access these purported products. This is not a one-time fee for software or training. Instead, it functions as a membership tier within an MLM structure designed to extract money from new recruits.

Details of the compensation plan are notably absent from original materials. MLM operators often bury such information in jargon or keep it vague. The math for these schemes rarely works unless the focus is on recruitment, not product sales.

Modern fraud often hides behind multiple company names, uses fake domain registrations, and makes contradictory claims about ownership. Obscuring the compensation structure and dressing it up in tech language creates enough confusion to deter questions. Royal Job Desk offers no legitimate jobs or products; it seeks recruits for a pyramid scheme run by people who do not use their real names.