The conversion & retention agent playbook

Scam brokerages run their callers in two stages — and they even have internal slang for it. The friendly 'personal advisor' is the central figure of the scam, and their job is not to help you.

Conversion, then retention

As soon as you register, the first caller — the "conversion" agent — gets in touch. Their single job is to talk you into that first small deposit, around $250 / €250, to "test" the software. The moment you deposit, you are handed to a second person: the "retention" agent, your assigned "personal advisor", presented as a market expert. In reality, an estimated 98% of them know next to nothing about trading — they are salespeople reading a script.

The tell

Ask your "advisor" one precise market question — about spreads, margin, how an instrument settles, or why a position moved — and judge the answer. A real professional answers cleanly and specifically. A scammer deflects, turns vague, or steers you straight back to depositing. Their real job is to keep you depositing, to talk you out of withdrawing, and sometimes to get you to install remote-access software.

How to spot it

  • Unsolicited calls, often right after the first deposit
  • Pressure to deposit more or "upgrade" to VIP
  • "Exclusive" trade tips or profit promises
  • Vague, deflecting answers to specific market questions
  • Requests for remote access, or contact only via WhatsApp/Telegram

How to protect yourself

  • Hang up on unsolicited calls — genuine brokers do not cold-call retail clients
  • Never place trades on a caller's instruction
  • Never grant remote access and never accept a deposit "bonus"
  • Ask one precise market question and judge the answer
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