SuperAdPro fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.

SuperAdPro’s website domain (“superadpro.com”), was privately registered on February 17th, 2026.

Further research reveals Steve Lawson referring to SuperAdPro as “his platform” on social media:

Steve Lawson is from the UK and has been promoting MLM schemes for over a decade.

Lawson has featured on BehindMLM in connection with

Explaining why he created SuperAdPro, on June 14th Lawson stated it was because he’s “aged quickly in the past 5 years since going back to full time employment”.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.

SuperAdPro’s Products

SuperAdPro has no retailable products or services.

Promoters are only able to market SuperAdPro promoter membership itself.

SuperAdPro’s Compensation Plan

SuperAdPro promoters sign up and then purchase $20 to $1000 income positions in tether (USDT).

Commissions are paid out when recruited promoters do the same.

Personal Recruitment Commissions

SuperAdPro promoters earn 10 USDT a month per promoter they personally recruit.

Initial Recruitment Commissions

SuperAdPro pays recruitment commissions via a unilevel compensation structure.

A unilevel compensation structure places a promoter at the top of a unilevel team, with every personally recruited promoter placed directly under them (level 1):

If any level 1 promoters recruit new promoters, they are placed on level 2 of the original promoter’s unilevel team.

If any level 2 promoters recruit new promoters, they are placed on level 3 and so on and so forth down a theoretical infinite number of levels.

Recruitment commissions are paid as 6.25% of tier purchases and pay down eight levels of recruitment across each unilevel team leg.

Note that each tier has its own matrix to fill. See “Residual Recruitment Commissions” below for tier pricing.

Residual Recruitment Commissions

SuperAdPro pays residual commissions via the same unilevel compensation structure used to pay recruitment commissions

This time SuperAdPro restricts unilevel teams by capping recruitment legs at six across. Depth is also capped at six levels per leg, creating forty-two positions to fill per unilevel team tier.

Positions in a SuperAdPro matrix are filled via positions purchases by directly and indirectly recruited promoters.

Across SuperAdPro’s eight-tier cycler, commissions are paid out as follows:

  • Tier 1 (positions cost 20 USDT) – pays 6.25% per position filled plus 64 USDT on matrix completion
  • Tier 2 (positions cost 50 USDT) – pays 6.25% per position filled plus 160 USDT on matrix completion
  • Tier 3 (positions cost 100 USDT) – pays 6.25% per position filled plus 320 USDT on matrix completion
  • Tier 4 (positions cost 200 USDT) – pays 6.25% per position filled plus 640 USDT on matrix completion
  • Tier 5 (positions cost 400 USDT) – pays 6.25% per position filled plus 1280 USDT on matrix completion
  • Tier 6 (positions cost 600 USDT) – pays 6.25% per position filled plus 1920 USDT on matrix completion
  • Tier 7 (positions cost 800 USDT) – pays 6.25% per position filled plus 2560 USDT on matrix completion
  • Tier 8 (positions cost 1000 USDT) – pays 6.25% per position filled plus 3200 USDT on matrix completion

Re-Entry

After a unilevel team is filled (either recruitment commissions or residual recruitment commissions), entry into a new unilevel team on that tier is required.

SuperAdPro’s marketing suggests this requires purchase of a new tier position.

Joining SuperAdPro

SuperAdPro promoter membership is 20 USDT a month (15 USDT for first 100 promoters)

Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires 3170 USDT in income position purchases. Ongoing position purchases are also required to continue earning.

SuperAdPro Conclusion

SuperAdPro is Steve Lawson discovering AI-slop and using it to vibe code a scam.

To that end there are obvious errors on SuperAdPro’s website that appear to have gone undetected:

It’s also worth noting that after initially launching SuperAdPro, it didn’t take long for hackers to exploit Lawson’s vibe code:

SuperAdPro is a simple MLM pyramid scheme. Newly recruited promoters sign up and purchase income positions. This funds commissions for those who recruited them and, through MLM, promoters who joined before them.

In turn, these recruited promoters then earn on recruitment of new promoters.

In an attempt to appear legitimate, SuperAdPro bundles AI-slop marketing videos with its income positions;

What am I actually buying?

A video ad campaign with guaranteed views.

In the same way Steve Lawson not wanting to work full-time doesn’t legitimize fraud, neither does bundling a product or service to a pyramid scheme.

As per the FTC, an MLM company without retail sales is an illegal pyramid scheme. Similar anti-fraud laws are enforced in other countries, including the UK (Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008).

As with all MLM pyramid schemes, once promoter recruitment inevitably dries up so do commissions.

Math guarantees that when an MLM pyramid scheme inevitably collapses, the majority of participants lose money.