A serial MLM operator is back with another scheme. Johnny Ganoza, the man behind multiple failed gifting and matrix cycler scams, has launched Post 2 Profits—and it's the same con dressed up in new clothes.
Ganoza keeps his operations deliberately opaque. The Post 2 Profits website lists no ownership information and uses a privately registered domain. But tracing the site's technical infrastructure reveals Ganoza's fingerprints all over it. The domain uses name servers controlled by Xtreme Pro System, a private hosting operation Ganoza runs that houses directories for each of his schemes. A YouTube video posted by "The PLR System" account in January 2017 directly confirms Ganoza owns Post 2 Profits.
This isn't Ganoza's first rodeo. He first surfaced running Xtreme Pro System in late 2014, a straight-line cycler pyramid where affiliates paid $45 expecting a $300 return. After the SEC shut down a similar scheme called Achieve Community in February 2015, Ganoza quietly killed the cycler model at his operation. The scheme collapsed days later.
But Ganoza didn't stop. Before Xtreme Pro System, he was running Average Joe Profit System, promising $202,500 returns on $5 investments. After Xtreme tanked, he pivoted to PowerPost Profits in September 2015. That lasted weeks. In November 2015, The PLR System launched—another cash gifting matrix cycler. When that stalled, Ganoza rebooted it twice: The $100 System and The PLR System v2 in 2016. The PLR System v2 drew interest in October but then died. Enter Post 2 Profits.
The pattern is unmistakable. Each scheme collapses. Ganoza rebrands and relaunches. Repeat.
Post 2 Profits operates on the same mechanics as every other Ganoza operation. There are no actual products to sell. Affiliates only recruit other affiliates. The package includes access to a "FB Auto Poster" that supposedly posts to Facebook groups automatically, but this is window dressing. The real product is the recruitment scheme itself.
The compensation structure is a 3×3 matrix cycler. Affiliates pay $25 for a position. The matrix has three levels. The first level contains three positions. The second level splits into nine positions. The third level into 27 positions. When all positions at any level fill up, a commission pays out and the next level unlocks. The entire matrix holds 39 positions.
This is a mathematical dead end. For someone to make money, two new people must join beneath them. For those two to profit, four more must join. The numbers explode exponentially. The vast majority of participants join after the pyramid has already collapsed under its own weight.
Ganoza has run this exact playbook at least five times now. Participants in his previous schemes lost money when they inevitably collapsed. There's nothing new here—just a new domain name and fresh marketing language wrapped around the same broken model.
The FTC and state authorities have shut down countless matrix cyclers. They're illegal pyramid schemes. Yet Ganoza keeps launching them. Post 2 Profits is not an opportunity. It's a trap with a familiar architect.
🤖 Quick Answer
Who is Johnny Ganoza and what is his connection to Post 2 Profits?Johnny Ganoza is a serial MLM operator linked to multiple failed gifting and matrix cycler schemes. He owns Post 2 Profits through infrastructure controlled by his company Xtreme Pro System, which hosts directories for his various operations. His ownership was confirmed through a 2017 YouTube video posted by "The PLR System" account.
How does Post 2 Profits maintain operational opacity?
The Post 2 Profits website omits ownership information and utilizes a privately registered domain. The site's name servers are controlled by Xtreme Pro System, Ganoza's private hosting operation, which obscures direct attribution while maintaining technical control over the platform's infrastructure.
When did Ganoza's MLM history begin?
Johnny Ganoza first emerged operating Xtreme Pro System in late
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