OfferHubb, a company claiming to offer daily deals and advertising services, registered its primary domain, offerhubb.com, on September 25, 2012. It does not publicly disclose its ownership or management. The domain's registration details remain hidden. A second domain, offerhubb.net, registered November 3, 2012, initially listed "Lindsey Pinapfel" as owner before that information was removed on December 14.
The mailing address OfferHubb provides, 1712 Pioneer Avenue, Suite 1315, Cheyenne, Wyoming, belongs to Corporations Today, an incorporation service run by Gerald Pitts, not OfferHubb itself. An affiliate application form lists a different address: a PO Box in Fullerton, California. The form also specifies bank wires through City National Bank as the only accepted payment method.
David Flynn appears in a YouTube marketing video. The video names him as company President. No explanation has been given for why this information does not appear on OfferHubb's official website. Flynn's multi-level marketing history is not publicly available. This secrecy immediately raises concerns. Legitimate businesses identify their leadership openly. Hidden ownership structures and shell addresses often mark operations built to hide accountability.
OfferHubb claims to be a daily deals portal. It says advertisers can publish offers in an online directory. The company states it offers "business to business" deals and "online offers & coupon codes." Neither directory worked when this report was compiled.
The compensation plan centers on selling advertising services. OfferHubb uses a unilevel system, a common multi-level marketing structure. One affiliate sits at the top, with recruits stacked directly beneath them at different levels. The company pays 15 percent commission on advertising sales made by anyone in the affiliate's downline. It pays 10 percent on sales from directly recruited affiliates. The structure also includes a Bonus Point Pool and Auto Credit Advertising component, but how they function remains unclear.
The core product, the daily deals directory where this advertising is supposedly sold, does not work. A business that does not operate, sells no product, hides its owners, and pays commissions on recruitment often mirrors schemes that failed under regulatory review.
The situation recalls Zeek Rewards, the 2012 penny-auction scheme. The SEC shut down Zeek and forced it to repay $195 million to defrauded investors. Zeek, like OfferHubb, used a daily deals model. This served as cover for what was a recruitment-focused compensation scheme. The SEC found Zeek paid affiliates mainly for recruiting others, not for actual retail sales.
OfferHubb's setup mirrors this template: vague products, non-working directories, hidden ownership, and pay tied to recruitment. Skepticism remains until OfferHubb explains its hidden leadership, non-functional product directories, and commissions paid on a non-operational model.
