Answer:
It has the appearance of one. You send them $75 and they'll let you have a website that other people visit to learn of business opportunities. Anytime someone registers through your site, they say they'll pay you $30. They also say you'll get 10% from there on from that contact.
The claims are extravagantly bold. $2,000 per week, just for that one time initial investment!
Here's a question that they don't answer - what do they need you for? I mean, besides the $75 you are sending them, probably via your credit card info? I surely can't be the only one who knows that a company can set up as many websites as they like, they don't need someone paying them money to do that.
And given how much each of these websites is supposed to make, why would they give that to you? Why don't they just set up the website, and let the first three hits bring them in $90 - more than enough to cover the cost of the website - and then they don't have to pay you a thing?
This tells me that they do not expect to have to pay you any meaningful amount of money at all. Certainly they do not expect to pay you more $75 - the amount they are charging you upfront.
Best avoided.
(Add to this that the claimed parent company 'Consumer's Best Buy, Inc.'
has numerous complaints against it for fraud - well, enough said.)