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How to spot a pyramid scheme - Stacie Bosley

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    In 2004,
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    a new company called Vemma Nutrition
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    started offering a life-changing
    opportunity
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    to earn full time income
    for part time work.
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    Vemma’s offer was open to everybody,
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    regardless of prior experience
    or education.
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    There were only two steps to start
    get started earning:
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    purchase a $500-600 kit
    of their liquid nutrition products,
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    and recruit two more members
    to do the same.
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    Vemma Nutrition Company grew quickly,
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    becoming a global operation
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    that brought in 30,000 new members
    per month at its peak.
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    There was just one problem—
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    while the company generated $200 million
    of annual revenue by 2013,
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    the vast majority of participants
    earned less than they paid in.
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    Vemma was eventually charged with
    operating a pyramid scheme:
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    a common type of fraud
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    where members make money
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    by recruiting more people to buy in.
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    Typically, the founder solicits an initial
    group of people
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    to buy in and promote the scheme.
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    They are then encouraged to recruit others
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    and promised part of the money
    those people invest,
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    while the founder also takes a share.
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    The pattern repeats for each group
    of new participants,
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    with money from recent arrivals funneled
    to those who recruited them.
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    This differs from a Ponzi scheme,
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    where the founders recruit new members
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    and secretly use their fees to
    pay existing members,
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    who think the payments come
    from a legitimate investment.
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    As a pyramid scheme grows,
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    it becomes increasingly difficult for new
    recruits to make money.
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    That’s because the number of participants
    expands exponentially.
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    Take a structure where each person has
    to recruit six more to earn a profit.
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    The founder recruits six people to start,
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    and each of them recruits six more.
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    There are 36 people in that second
    round of recruits,
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    who then each recruit 6 people—
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    a total of 216 new recruits.
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    By the twelfth round of recruiting,
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    the 2.1 billion newest members
    would have to recruit
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    over 13 billion more people total
    to make money–
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    more than the entire world population.
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    In this scenario,
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    the most recent recruits,
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    over 80% of the scheme’s participants,
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    lose all the money they paid in.
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    And in real life,
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    many earlier joiners lose out too.
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    Pyramid schemes are illegal
    in most countries,
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    but they can be difficult to detect.
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    They are presented as many
    different things,
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    including gifting groups,
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    investment clubs, and multi-level
    marketing businesses.
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    The distinction between pyramid schemes
    and legitimate multi-level marketing
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    can be particularly hazy.
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    In theory, the difference is that
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    the members of the multi-level
    marketing companies
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    primarily earn compensation from selling
    a particular product or a service
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    to retail customers,
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    while pyramid schemes primarily compensate
    members for recruitment of new sellers.
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    In practice, though,
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    many multi-level marketing companies make
    it all but impossible
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    for members to profit purely
    through sales.
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    And many pyramid schemes,
    like Vemma Nutrition,
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    disguise themselves as legal multi-level
    marketing businesses,
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    using a product or service to hide the
    pay-and-recruit structure.
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    Many pyramid schemes also capitalize
    on already existing trust within churches,
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    immigrant communities,
    or other tightly knit groups.
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    The first few members are encouraged
    to report a good experience
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    before they actually start
    making a profit.
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    Others in their network follow
    their example,
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    and the schemes balloon in size
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    before it comes clear that most members
    aren’t actually profiting.
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    Often, the victims are
    embarrassed into silence.
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    Pyramid schemes entice people with the
    promise of opportunity and empowerment.
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    So when members don’t end up making money,
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    they can blame themselves
    rather than the scheme,
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    thinking they weren’t tenacious enough
    to earn the returns promised.
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    Some victims keep trying,
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    investing in multiple schemes,
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    and losing money each time.
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    In spite of all these factors,
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    there are ways to spot a pyramid scheme.
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    Time pressure is one red flag—
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    be wary of directives to “act now or
    miss a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”
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    Promises of large, life-altering
    amounts of income are also suspect.
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    And finally, a legitimate multi-level
    marketing business
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    shouldn’t require members to pay for the
    opportunity to sell a product or service.
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    Pyramid schemes can be incredibly
    destructive to individuals,
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    communities, and even entire countries.
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    But you can fight fire with fire
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    by sending this video to three
    people you know,
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    and encouraging them to do the same.
Title:
How to spot a pyramid scheme - Stacie Bosley
Speaker:
Stacie Bosley
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:49
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