March 18, 2009
Someone tell me a math formula for this scenario?
jnbill1204 asked:
I have a multi level marketing campaign that i would like to start. It has ten layers and looks like this.
I have a multi level marketing campaign that i would like to start. It has ten layers and looks like this.
One person gets another person to signup and earns 10 cents for the first level then the for every person that signsup after the first layer up to the tenth the person earns 3 cents.
so our affiliate signs up a person he earns 10 cents. The person below him signs up a person and the affiliate earns 3 cents. The third person signs up a person and the affiliat earns 3 cents up untill the tenth layer.
It’s kind of like compound interest isn’t it? I’m tired and can’t figure it out at the moment.
Filed under Mathematics by Susan

Comments on Someone tell me a math formula for this scenario? »
x = average number of people a person can get to sign up
c = number of cents you make
y = total number of layers
c = 10x + 3x^(y-1)
Max possible for y=10 and x=10
$30,000,0010
While you’re doing the calculating, also calculate how many people have to contribute to make this thing work. Sooner or later, all multilevel marketing schemes run into the fact that the market is finite and will saturate. Those getting into such a scheme late will get the shaft.