A company selling $200 webpages doesn't want you to know who's running it.

MyNetworkOne hides its ownership behind a private domain registration and an "about us" page that says nothing about who actually owns the business. LinkedIn tells a different story. Rod Wortham claims the title of Founder and CEO on his profile, yet his name appears nowhere on the MyNetworkOne website itself.

This is Wortham's second swing at the network marketing game. Before MyNetworkOne, he launched ToBizNet, a venture that's now dead. A 2011 YouTube video shows how ToBizNet worked: affiliates paid between $150 and $250 just to recruit other affiliates. The pattern looks familiar.

MyNetworkOne sells three main products. MNO Marketplace is an ecommerce portal connecting shoppers to over 3,000 retailers. When customers use the platform, merchants pay fees for the traffic, which generates cashback for users. The catch: it's free to join as a customer, but MyNetworkOne sells the marketing system itself—called Biz1Stop—for $200 upfront plus $99 monthly.

Fund1Stop operates on the same model, targeting organizations that need fundraising. It costs $160 to start and $60 per month.

Then there's TaxBot, a tax management app created by Sandy Botkin, who markets himself as "the #1 Tax Coach in North America." MyNetworkOne doesn't list any retail price for it.

The real money in MyNetworkOne isn't from selling products. It's from recruitment.

The compensation plan pays affiliates through a unilevel structure—meaning commissions flow up a single line of recruits. Affiliates earn residual commissions, recruitment bonuses, and shares in bonus pools. The system has seven ranks, each requiring members to maintain minimum monthly volume from either their own sales or recruited affiliates' autoships.

To reach Sales Agent status, you need at least $27 monthly in commissionable volume. Move up to Executive Sales Agent and you need to recruit three qualified affiliates while maintaining that volume. Higher ranks demand more recruits and higher monthly requirements.

This structure has a built-in problem. Most affiliates struggle to earn genuine product sales. Instead, they're pushed toward recruiting others and maintaining monthly purchases to stay "commission qualified." That keeps money flowing upward to those at the top.

MyNetworkOne operates in the gray area between legitimate direct sales and pyramid scheme. The products exist, yes, but the compensation plan heavily incentivizes recruitment over retail sales. When an affiliate's income depends more on who they sign up than on actual customer purchases, the business becomes about moving money from new recruits to existing members.

Wortham's history with ToBizNet—where people paid $150 to $250 just to recruit others—suggests this isn't his first rodeo with this model. The fact that he hides his involvement on the main website raises another red flag.

Anyone considering MyNetworkOne should ask themselves one question: how many people actually use these products without being affiliates trying to make money? If the answer is "not many," then you're not looking at a product-based business. You're looking at a recruitment scheme wearing a product's clothing.


🤖 Quick Answer

Who is the founder of MyNetworkOne?
Rod Wortham is identified as the Founder and CEO of MyNetworkOne according to his LinkedIn profile, though his name does not appear on the company's official website. Wortham previously launched ToBizNet, a network marketing venture that is no longer operational.

What products does MyNetworkOne offer?
MyNetworkOne sells three main products, including MNO Marketplace, an ecommerce portal that connects shoppers to over 3,000 retailers. The company operates within the network marketing sector, offering opportunities for affiliates and members to participate in its business structure.

How does MyNetworkOne's business model compare to previous ventures?
MyNetworkOne follows a similar structure to Wortham's previous company, ToBizNet, where affiliates paid between $150 and $250 primarily to recruit other affiliates. This pattern represents


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