Only7Bucks Review: $7 two-tier matrix cycler

A serial MLM operator has launched yet another matrix cycler scheme, this time charging just $7 per position.

Only7Bucks operates under the Success Unlimited USA banner, a company owned by John Dierksmeier. The Austin and New York-based firm claims over 13 years of experience in marketing services and self-development programs, but Dierksmeier's actual track record tells a different story.

Since 2011, Dierksmeier has launched a string of recruitment schemes that have largely collapsed or stalled. MaxeVida came first in 2011, followed by Cafe Nopal in 2014—a coffee scheme mixed with nopal extract designed to recruit rather than sell. Both are now dead.

In 2015 alone, Dierksmeier launched four separate MLM operations: 2×2 Wealth, Nopa Vida, EcoPlus Network, and My Secret Fortune. All were matrix-based Ponzi cyclers. Their websites still exist, but traffic data shows each one in steady decline. That pattern appears to have prompted Dierksmeier to launch Only7Bucks.

The company has no actual products or services. Affiliates only market membership itself. Once they sign up for free, they must buy into $7 matrix positions to participate. Each position comes bundled with advertising credits—redeemable on the Only7Bucks website—and access to what the company calls a "universal teaching program" filled with ebooks.

The mechanics are straightforward Ponzi math. Only7Bucks uses a two-tier 2×4 matrix cycler. Affiliates sit at the top of a matrix with two positions directly beneath them. Those two positions split into four more, which split into eight. That creates six total positions to fill. Each filled position triggers a "cycle."

When an affiliate cycles out of their matrix, they pocket a commission and move to the next tier. The first matrix pays $550 after positions cost $7 each. The second matrix pays $9,700 after positions cost $75 each.

The math doesn't work. For the scheme to pay anyone at the higher tiers, far more money must flow in from new recruits than flows out in commissions. That's the definition of a Ponzi scheme. Eventually recruitment slows, the cycle stops, and most participants lose their investment.

Dierksmeier has run versions of this same play for over a decade. The names change. The products disappear. But the structure remains—a matrix that enriches early entrants while leaving the majority broke. Only7Bucks is just the latest iteration of the same failed model that killed MaxeVida and Cafe Nopal before it.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Only7Bucks?
Only7Bucks is a matrix cycler scheme operated by Success Unlimited USA, requiring $7 per position entry. It functions as a two-tier cycler system where participants advance through predetermined matrix levels based on recruitment rather than product sales.

Who operates Only7Bucks?
Only7Bucks operates under Success Unlimited USA, a company owned by John Dierksmeier. The Austin and New York-based firm claims over 13 years of experience in marketing services and self-development programs.

What is Dierksmeier's MLM history?
Since 2011, John Dierksmeier has launched multiple recruitment schemes including MaxeVida, Cafe Nopal, 2×2 Wealth, and Nopa Vida. Most have subsequently collapsed or stalled, establishing a pattern of short-lived operations


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