Fortune Hi Tech Marketing: Does it really mean Fortune or Failure?

by Bob on November 28, 2009

If you are to look out and open up your ears to the buzzing sound being created in the marketing industry, you will hear the name of a MLM Company known as Fortune Hi Tech Marketing or FHTM. This company has suddenly become one of the hottest topics in the community. But why is that? What’s the story behind that? Well, many claim it as a scam while there are people saying that it is a great company offering a great opportunity. Sounds contrasting, right? In relation to this, I did an FHTM review to give a deeper understanding of this company.

Fortune Hi Tech Marketing or FHTM is a MLM company that connects a variety of products to sales representatives who want to earn an online income. It is a company founded by Paul Orberson in 2001. The founder of the company is known as a very experienced and successful online entrepreneur. He decided to retire and create his own network marketing business for him to share his success with other people. According to Paul Orberson, he cares for people and wants to help people to become secure financially. And that’s how FHTM started.

So is it really a scam? Since FHTM is based on the principle of a multi-level marketing plan, people then termed it as scam. Well, the truth is, it is not a scam. The Federal Trade Commission helps you determine the legal programs from illegal by stating that there should be a legal product to sell rather than just by recruiting new members. So, that proves FHTM isn’t really a scam for it provides a number of different products. And that engaging with FHTM could really means earning profits.

Then, how can an individual earn from Fortune Hi Tech Marketing? As what has been said earlier, FHTM has a wide range of products from services to communications and beauty. There’s a lot for a member to choose what to market. Thus, it is up to you how much you can earn. And with regards to becoming a part of FHTM, it is just simple. A membership of $299 is needed to be paid to be an authorized member of Fortune Hi Tech Marketing. As a member, your goal is to sell product as well as recruit new members and build your sales team. With the commissions, the payout is between 2-20 percent based on the volume of the products being sold by you and your team.

To sum it all up, Fortune Hi Tech Marketing is a good company and not a scam but in fact is a sound company. It offers great opportunity to individuals who want to earn an extra income. Yet, being a part of FHTM doesn’t really mean success. Why? It is because an individual’s success doesn’t depend on the company and the products. Instead, it all depends on his marketing knowledge and skills. He has to have a well established foundation of marketing knowledge so he can be able to have an edge with the others.

So if you want to have success in a MLM business like FHTM, be sure to equip yourself with the right marketing knowledge. You may seek help from a mentor who has incline knowledge with the said field. Doing so, you will be able to learn how to sponsor 10-20 reps a month. And that’s the real key to your success.

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  • Anonymous

    FTC Steps Up Efforts Against Scams That Target Financially-Strapped Consumers
    More Than 90 Actions Brought By Commission and Its Law Enforcement Partners
    Attorney General Roy Cooper today joined state attorneys general from across the country and the Federal Trade Commission to announce a national sweep targeting business opportunity scams, including actions against four companies that have targeted North Carolina consumers.
    “When jobs are scarce, claims to help people make money fast become plentiful,” Cooper said. “Consumers think they’re buying into a great way to earn a living, but they could end up paying far more than they’ll ever make.”
    In challenging economic times, many people in the state are looking for work. Unfortunately, sometimes they find scams instead of legitimate opportunities. Complaints to the Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division about business opportunity, work-at-home schemes, and other employment related scams were up 11 percent last year, from 177 complaints in 2009 to 197 complaints in 2010.
    Operation Empty Promises is a national sweep by the FTC, Cooper and other state attorneys general aimed at stopping business opportunity scams and educating consumers about how to avoid them. Announced as part of the sweep are actions taken by Cooper’s Consumer Protection Division against four companies including
    Fortune Hi Tech Marketing claims that people who buy into its business earn thousands of dollars a year. Based on consumer complaints, Cooper’s office launched an investigation into FHTM in mid 2010. Consumers say they paid money to the company but were only able to make money by recruiting others into the scheme, not by selling any actual goods or services. A total of 25 consumers have now complained about FHTM, and Cooper’s office is investigating the company. Although this case is currently under investigation, it’s important for consumers to know that a pyramid scheme is a violation of the law and is defined as any plan in which a participant pays money for the chance to receive money upon the introduction of new participants into the program.
    “We’re looking closely at business opportunities that seem to offer false hopes, and also reaching out to educate consumers on how to recognize and avoid fraud,” Cooper said.
    Later this month, Cooper’s office plans to launch a tool kit to educate consumers on fake business opportunities which will include print, web and video materials. The goal is to prevent North Carolina consumers from losing their hard-earned money to scammers trying to take advantage of a tough employment market.
    “Don’t let scammers use empty promises of jobs with high earnings to take your money,” Cooper warned consumers. “Before you agree to invest in any business, check it out thoroughly and always be skeptical of claims of guaranteed profits.”
    Cooper has taken action against a number of other kinds of scams fueled by hard times. For example, his Consumer Protection Division has won 13 cases against foreclosure assistance and loan modification scams in the past five years, including two so far in 2011.The Federal Trade Commission today stepped up its ongoing campaign against scammers who falsely promise guaranteed jobs and opportunities to “be your own boss” to consumers who are struggling with unemployment and diminished incomes as a consequence of the economic downturn.
    “Operation Empty Promises,” a multi-agency law enforcement initiative today announced more than 90 enforcement actions, including three new FTC cases and developments in seven other matters, 48 criminal actions by the Department of Justice (many of which involved the assistance of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service), seven additional civil actions by the Postal Inspection Service, and 28 actions by state law enforcement agencies in Alaska, California, Indiana, Kansas, Maryland, Montana, New Jersey, North Carolina, Oregon, Washington, and the District of Columbia.
    In a press conference at the FTC, David Vladeck, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, was joined by Tony West, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division of the Department of Justice; Greg Campbell, Deputy Chief Inspector of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service; North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper; and a California consumer who had bought into a program to start his own Internet business.
    “The victims of these frauds are our neighbors – people who are trying to make an honest living,” said David C. Vladeck, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “Under pressure to make ends meet, they risked their limited financial resources in response to the promise of a job, an income – a chance at a profitable home-based business. But these turned out to be empty promises – and the people who counted on them ended up with high levels of frustration and even higher levels of debt.”
    The FTC has updated consumer education materials to help consumers avoid falling victim to these scams. Screen shots from the websites of some of the operators charged in this law enforcement sweep, as well as video footage of FTC Consumer Protection Director Vladeck and FTC attorney Daniel Hanks, are also available at the FTC website.

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