The Split2All website, registered on September 19, 2013, offers no details about its ownership or management. Its domain registration remains private, obscuring the identities of those behind the operation. This lack of transparency raises immediate questions for potential participants.

Split2All openly advertises it sells shares to affiliates, not retailable products or services. "We base our program in SHARES," the company website states. "We have unlimited shares for sale. So when you purchase your shares, you will earn tons of money in hours or even in minutes!" Each share includes advertising credits for use on the Split2All site.

Affiliates purchase shares for either $1, $5, or $10. These shares "mature" at a promised return on investment. A $1 share yields $1.30 (130% ROI), a $5 share returns $7 (140% ROI), and a $10 share provides $15 (150% ROI).

To qualify for these returns, affiliates must view five company-supplied ads daily. Split2All allows members to pay an extra fee to bypass this requirement. And referral commissions extend down five levels of recruitment. A 5% commission applies to first-level referrals. Second-level referrals generate 2%, and levels three through five each pay 1%.

Membership to Split2All is free. But affiliates must invest in shares to withdraw any commissions. The company's "Earnings Disclaimer" declares, "Our Program is designed to give a guarateed (sic) profits to all our active members."

The Split2All business model is explicitly outlined on its site. "When you purchase a share, you have the rights to earn a part of our revenue," the site explains. "Your shares grow according to our company. If we make money, then YOU also make money! The more shares and products sold, the more money you make! Simple like that. Every time a member purchase a share or any other of our products, the money are split to ALL the shares in the system, equally. The more money you have to spend, the more money you will make!"

This structure, detailed by Split2All itself, defines a classic Ponzi scheme: new investor money pays off earlier investors. The company's website footer, simply reading "Powered," offers no further details.