"Learn Earn Own," or LEO, launched in 2012, claiming global headquarters at Howberry Manor in the United Kingdom. This address, however, does not appear on the official business directory for Howberry Business Park, raising initial questions about the company's physical presence.

The discrepancy at Howberry Manor is not an isolated incident. LEO lists other international office locations that also prove difficult to verify as physical spaces. Its Dubai address is a post office box. In Hong Kong, the company uses a virtual mailing address provided by JumpStart, costing about $17.30 USD per month. Both Egypt and India offices operate out of virtual spaces supplied by Regus.

In Turkey, a lawyer's office shares LEO's listed address, and that law firm advertises "virtual office serves" on its own website. Germany's "LEO Tower" address seems to be non-existent; LEO's own website suggests such a tower might one day be built in Dubai, not Germany. These findings suggest LEO may lack any actual, permanent office space globally.

Dan Andersson is listed as LEO's Founder, CEO, and President. His corporate profile offers few specific details, instead presenting vague marketing language. It describes his career as a "quest to find a platform" for personal and professional development. The profile notes he gained European and global direct selling executive experience, along with management and training consultancy work for Fortune 500 companies.

Andersson's most relevant past experience likely stems from his time as a training consultant. He built a consultancy that contributed to successful European companies, including Toyota, DHL, Phillips, and Digital Equipment. He also worked with large UK retailers, banks, and professional service firms. After his consultancy, he returned to direct selling as European Sales Director for a UK Telecoms company. He later joined a large Chinese company, becoming one of six Vice Presidents responsible for 24 European countries, Israel, Canada, and the USA.

The "UK Telecoms company" mentioned appears to be SiteTalk/Unaico. BusinessForHome cited Andersson as the company's President in 2011. SiteTalk/Unaico was a failed multi-level marketing venture centered on a social network. It included a virtual share offering and tied commission qualification to affiliate payments. Little retail activity occurred within SiteTalk/Unaico. The company collapsed around the time Andersson departed in 2012. It has since rebranded as The Opportunity Network, releasing multiple revisions of its SiteTalk social network.