profit clicking Sustainability

The profit clicking system has been designed in a way that is indefinitely sustainable. However, it is difficult for the average member to understand it.

Frederick Mann, the owner of profitclicking (formerly Justbeenpaid), has offered to pay $1 million to anyone that can find a flaw with this system.  I was determined to find a flaw in the system, and studied it intensely for months and concluded that it is in fact indefinitely sustainable.

 This means that you can earn from this system for as long as they decide to stay in business... the potential earnings is unlimited.

The program was originally a 2x2 matrix system, but the profit sharing model was introduced in early 2011 to enable any member to earn a great amount of money without having to recruit or sponsor people into the program.

The 2x2 matrix system by itself is sustainable, and follows a patented system. However, the second part of the program which pays up to 2% per day during weekdays and 1% on the weekends is not sustainable. But let's face it, everyone wants to make money the easy way, and earning 2% per day is what everybody wants especially if it does not involve much effort. This is why the business model incorporates this daily payment system to attract more members, increase their popularity, and hence, ensure that they keep making a lot of sales. Whenever the system starts to get to a point at which they are paying out so much that their account balance starts to deplete at a faster rate than they are making sales, they initiate a profit shift feature that converts the daily earning units into the matrix (PC panels).

The profit shifts (formerly called restarts) usually occur every 3 to 4 months and typically converts 50% of the earning units into the matrix, but depending on the cash flow of the company, they could convert much more than 50%... even 100%.  Members are usually not happy when the profit shifts occur, because it reduces the daily earnings, but this feature ensures that the system is in fact sustainable and can possibly go on for as long as the internet exists.

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