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A finder’s fee (also known as “referral income” or “referral fee”) is a commission paid to an intermediary or the facilitator of a transaction. The finder’s fee is rewarded because the intermediary discovered the new investor(s) who also registered using the intermediary’s referral link. The presumption is that without the intermediary, the new investor(s) may never would have found the company, and the facilitator thus warrants compensation. Whenever a new investor makes the first deposit the intermediary receives a fixed percentage of the amount deposited as reward for introducing an new investor to the company. The percentage and amount depends on the amount the new investor deposited and in which crystal system the investor invested in. The finder’s fee is paid by the company and not from the new investors account.
* A finder’s fee or referral fee is a commission paid to the person or entity that facilitated a deal by linking up a potential customer with an opportunity.
* A finder’s fee is a reward and an incentive to motivate the facilitator of the transaction to keep providing referrals to the buyer or seller in the deal.
* The terms of a finder’s fee can vary from deal to deal, with a payout usually representing a percentage of the completed sale; in some cases, the “fee” is just an informal gift.