
Net-World Marketing: Commerce That Cares for Land, People, and the Future
Most people think Network Marketing is about money first.
I understand why. That’s how it’s often communicated.
But if you look at the kind of projects I’m involved in—ethical physical gold, clean water solutions, and regenerative eco-development—then the real game isn’t “more income.” The real game is: responsibility.
Why this is different: Donors, Investors… and Donvestors
Most people think you either donate money to do good, or you invest money to do well.
Net-World Marketing attracts a third type: the Donvestor—someone who supports projects that care for the land and the people, while also seeking a potential economic upside.
This is the Win–Win–Win standard: the participant wins, the people & land win, and the projects win—because that’s how business should work.
From “Network Marketing” to Net-World Marketing
Net-World Marketing is simple:
- Care for the land.
- Care for the people.
- Go forward.
It’s still commerce. It’s still growth. It’s still entrepreneurship.
But it’s not growth that extracts. It’s growth that regenerates.
The Positioning Statement
I don’t promote products. I connect people with projects that care for the land and the people—and still move forward economically. Money is a tool, not the goal: a vote for the kind of world we want more of. If profit destroys soil, dignity, or trust, it’s not progress. This is Net-World Marketing: capital with consequence.
The Mental Setup: Buckminster Fuller’s Question
There’s a quote often attributed to Buckminster Fuller that captures the mindset perfectly. In essence, it asks:
What needs doing that you know something about—and that probably won’t happen unless you take responsibility for it?
That is the mission of a Net-World Marketer.
Not “How do I sell more?” but:
- What am I willing to take responsibility for?
- Which broken system am I no longer willing to fund with my silence?
- To which question am I the answer?
What a Net-World Marketer Actually Does
A Network Marketer can build their world better and show others how to do the same.
A Net-World Marketer goes a level deeper:
- They build a community of people who think long-term.
- They support solutions that respect humans and nature.
- They promote models that make destructive systems less attractive over time.
This is what Win–Win–Win looks like in practice: you participate, the project scales, and the people/land affected by it benefit from responsible execution.
Call it a “warrior” mindset if you want—but not the noisy kind.
Warrior, Not Victim
The modern warrior doesn’t just fight the old. He builds the new model that makes the old obsolete.
A Net-World Marketer does not see themselves as a victim of systems, politics, or circumstances.
They understand one simple truth: complaining funds the very systems they claim to oppose.
The modern warrior does not fight blindly. He takes responsibility, builds better alternatives, and invites others to do the same.
Not louder. Not angrier. Just more constructive.
Why This Matters Now
We live in a time where people complain about inflation, politics, corporations, broken health, broken education… and then keep funding the same system with the same habits.
Net-World Marketing is a different posture: less complaining, more building.
Closing
If you feel this in your bones, you’re already one of us.
Care for the land. Care for the people. Go forward.
If this resonates
This isn’t for everyone—and that’s intentional.
If you’re the kind of person who wants your money to make sense—not just for you, but for the world—then you’ll understand the Donvestor mindset.
Explore the educational pages first. No pressure. No promises.
Learn first. Decide later.
If you’d like an honest explanation – including opportunities, risks, and how everything works – feel free to contact me directly. No pressure. No sales show. Just straight talk.
Message me directly for personal information & support: Open WhatsApp
Greetings from Tenerife,
and talk soon,
Maikel D. Andres
maikel.d.andres@tfm24.com
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. Any examples or figures mentioned are illustrative and not guarantees. Always do your own research and consider professional advice where appropriate.