Oh yes good ole John who lives in splendor in sunny florida - takes other [peoples
money and actually has the nerve to keep in touch but of course does not answer emails or phone calls - he should truly appologize to half the world and give them back their hard earned dollars. Too bad he doesn't use his talent for a better purpose like helping those in need.
ellen
smithtown,#2Author of original report
Mon, December 21, 2009
perhaps someone else is esponsible for John Denton's web site but it was john denton to whom I sent $ or I should say to myebiznow.net which carries mr denton's name and address and website name. so maybe I should report both parties but i personally never had anything from the other party mentioned. I still think Mr. Denton owes me to refund my money as he did nothing for me - he is a true "rip-off" and I stand by my original report thank you.
Urlybird
Bexhill,#3Consumer Comment
Mon, December 21, 2009
I have a number of John Denton victims on my ever-growing list of PushTraffic victims.
John Denton is a JV partner of John Paul Raygoza. Denton gets the leads for his ill-named "coaching" program and passes them on to Raygoza.
Raygoza has been scamming people for a long, long time. The people on my list alone have paid well in excess of a half a million dollars between them.
When I made it my mission to expose the PushTraffic scam, it evolved into the IncFortune Scam, then the SuccessRate Scam, then the Dotintel Scam, as well as the JumpLaunch Scam and John Denton Scam. New names kept popping up because the previous ones were being exposed on sites like this one and various blogs. There are 3 blogs devoted to Raygoza's PushTraffic scam.
Sometimes victims have been told that Raygoza can reduce or eliminate your credit card debt. He tricks people into giving him their card number and while the client is on hold, he maxes out the credit card without permission. That's called fraud.
Other victims who do sign up for coaching find themselves stranded with no support, unanswered emails/calls and nothing to show for their payment. Some victims paid up to $40,000 with promises of personal assistance to coach them to success, but the calls have been sub-standard and personal coaching has been replaced by recordings of past webinars.
The companies above-mentioned put up a false professional front by inviting guests to a mansion or a hotel for a seminar to kick-start their professional online success, but from all accounts the seminars promote the same information that is available for free on the internet.
Clients also receive a generic product-review website (also available online for free, apart from hosting costs). Their own products are given 5-star reviews of course. If anyone gets a sale, the new purchasers are also contacted by the PushTraffic sales team to try to upsell them to the expensive coaching program.
Clients are being used. They pay big dollars, only to be made into puppets to funnel even more sales to PushTraffic.
When people complain that they are not getting the promised return on their investment or not getting any help or support, PushTraffic (et al) revert back to their one-sided contract, which states NO guarantees, NO refunds, NO resposibility whatsoever. There is even a clause that states that they do not take responsibility for anything the sales personnel promise before you before you sign up.
It's a huge scam. I am taking action on behalf of victims. I can be contacted at my gmail address (urlybird) if you or any other victims need guidance. My blog can be found very simply by googling pushtraffic scam.