Six Figure Stamp Club provides no information on their website about who owns or runs the business.

The Six Figure Stamp Club website domain (“sixfigurestampclub.com”) was privately registered on November 9th, 2018.

Six Figure Stamp Club provide a PO Box in Columbus, Ohio as a corporate address on their website.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.

Six Figure Stamp Club Products

Six Figure Stamp Club has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market Six Figure Stamp Club affiliate membership itself.

The Six Figure Stamp Club Compensation Plan

New Six Figure Stamp Club affiliates gift funds across four tiers to existing affiliates.

These gifting payments in turn qualify them to receiving gifting payments from newly recruited Six Figure Stamp Club affiliates.

Gifting payments across Six Figure Stamp Club’s four tiers are split into two levels.

Participants are provided a list of three addresses they are expected to send funds through in the mail.

Two of the addresses belong to Six Figure Stamp Club affiliates, the third is the admin PO Box in Ohio.

Red level – gift $80 to qualify to receive $50 from your personally recruited affiliates and $20 from their personally recruited affiliates ($10 admin gifting payment)

Blue level – gift $190 to qualify to receive $150 from your personally recruited affiliates and $40 from their personally recruited affiliates

Black level – gift $440 to qualify to receive $300 from your personally recruited affiliates and $100 from their personally recruited affiliates ($40 admin gifting payment)

Pearl level – gift $1500  to qualify to receive $1000 from your personally recruited affiliates and $500 from their personally recruited affiliates

Joining Six Figure Stamp Club

Six Figure Stamp Club affiliate membership is free.

Participation in the attached gifting scheme however requires a minimum $80 gifting payment.

Full participation in the Six Figure Stamp Club opportunity costs $2210.

Conclusion

Charles Ponzi attempted to legitimatize the Ponzi model using postage stamps.

Didn’t work back in 1919 and doesn’t work in 2019 with Six Figure Stamp Club.

The ruse behind Six Figure Stamp Club’s gifting scheme is sending people stamps in the mail.

These stamps are used to spam addresses, in the hope gullible schmucks will sign up and gift new money into the scheme.

The fundamental core of Six Figure Stamp Club’s business model sees new participants sending money to existing participants.

Whether this is done through the mail or online, it’s still cash gifting. And it’s totally illegal in both the US and Canada.

In fact before the internet, sending people cash through the mail is pretty much how ever cash gifting scheme worked (the model is commonly referred to as sending and receiving “chain letters”).

Over time more and more people are required to gift in to balance


🤖 Quick Answer

What is the Six Figure Stamp Club's business model?
Six Figure Stamp Club operates as a four-tier gifting scheme where new affiliates transfer funds to existing members. The company lacks retailable products or services, with the affiliate membership itself being the primary offering marketed to participants.

Why is the lack of ownership transparency concerning?
When MLM companies withhold information about owners and operators, it raises legitimacy questions. Potential members should exercise caution before joining or investing money in organizations that do not openly disclose management details and corporate governance structures.

What are Six Figure Stamp Club's contact details?
Six Figure Stamp Club operates through a privately registered domain registered November 9th, 2018, and provides a PO Box address in Columbus, Ohio as their corporate location on their website.


🔗 Related Articles

- Trivaren Review: Knights pushing cancer cures?
- 2×9 BitMax Review: Matrix-based bitcoin cash gifting
- BizzTrade run by “thieves, lying bastards”, says top promoter
- TelexFree exit strategy thwarted, millions recovered
- PayPal sued for facilitating Traffic Monsoon Ponzi fraud