Vizionary launched in 2015 as a simple membership-based pyramid scheme.

Affiliates paid a fee and were paid to recruit others who did the same. The more paid in fees, the higher the income potential via Vizionary’s compensation plan.

Alexa traffic statistics for the Vizionary website reveal the company began to collapse around May, 2017.

This turned around in September, coinciding with a new direction for the company.

A visit to Vizionary’s website today reveals a number of ICO offerings.

Vizionary itself launched with Capricoin, which pumped to $2.79 back in early 2016 before crashing to around 12 cents.

Coinciding with renewed activity on the Vizionary website, Capricoin is sitting at around 90 cents.

In addition to
pyramid recruiting
, pumping and dumping ICOs appears to be Vizionary’s new business model.

It’s worth noting that since our 2015 review, Vizionary has reduced their Platinum €2897 EUR package to €1997 EUR and added a new “Vizionary” package for €5997 EUR.

Capricoin is integrated into the compensation plan through a “mining unit resale program”.

Vizionary offers a wholesale platform where you can buy and sell mining time.

The price on mining time can vary depending on supply and demand; however, the maximum price for 1 mining slot is 12.50 Euro.

Vizionary affiliates are given mining slots when they sign up (pay more, get more positions). Affiliates can also invest directly into more mining slots.

Register for free. Choose how many shares of the pool. Pay and wait for the result.

Despite the obvious expectation of passive profit and securities offering, Vizionary provide no indication they are registered to offer securities in any jurisdiction they operate in.

Capricoin itself meanwhile is just as worthless as it was when Vizionary launched.

Although publicly tradeable, Capricoin serves no purpose outside of being a marketing tool to encourage Vizionary affiliate recruitment.

Onegram is an altcoin featured on the Vizionary website.

The company claims Onegram is

he first and only Shariah compliant, physical gold backed cryptocurrency that boasts having held the largest ICO in history.

If you’ve never heard of Onegram you’re not alone. Onegram is also not publicly tradeable and doesn’t exist outside of Vizionary.

Kinda strange for an altcoin claiming to have “held the largest ICO in history”…

Vizionary has an exclusive deal with OneGram to recommend and distribute OneGram coins.

This means that until OneGram is available on external exchanges, the only place to purchase OneGram coins is via a Vizionary membership.

And so following Capricoin not really going anywhere, OneGram looks set to be another pumped altcoin Vizionary affiliates pay the company real money for.

If there’s enough interest Vizionary will probably get OneGram listed on a public exchange, but after that – then what?

Vizionary heavily market OneGram as being “sharia compliant”.

ONEGRAM has enjoyed global media coverage and has been credited t


🤖 Quick Answer

What was Vizionary's original business model when launched in 2015?
Vizionary operated as a membership-based pyramid scheme where affiliates paid fees to join and earned income by recruiting additional members into the same structure, with compensation increasing based on fees paid.

How did Vizionary's website traffic change between 2015 and 2017?
According to Alexa traffic statistics, Vizionary's website experienced significant decline beginning in May 2017, indicating the company's collapse during this period.

What cryptocurrencies has Vizionary promoted?
Vizionary launched Capricoin, which reached $2.79 in early 2016 before declining to approximately 12 cents, and subsequently offered multiple ICO investments on its platform.

What market activities occurred following Vizionary's September 2017 restructuring?
Following the company's September 2017 reori


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