A verified map of the world's businesses and the real people behind them, where being real is the whole point, and where the corporate partners who help it grow are paid a share of what it earns.
Picture a single platform where every business has a page on a map, every worker carries a real and portable reputation, and every account is a verified, real identity rather than an anonymous handle. Businesses pay a small monthly subscription to be on it. Words can be owned on it the way internet addresses are owned. And unlike the platforms that came before, the corporate partners who bring others onto Bitword are paid a share of what those members pay, for as long as they stay. That last part is why it can grow faster than anything before it.
The accounts that build the platform. A company, a team, a church, a brand, or a public figure holds a corporate account and brings businesses and people onto Bitword. They are paid a share of every subscription they bring in, for as long as those members stay. The platform grows quickly because the people building it are paid to.
Every business has a verified page on the map, with its reviews and its team, found by customers searching the way they search a map today, except every result here is a confirmed, real business. A business pays a small monthly subscription to hold its place. Its own job is simple: gather reviews and bring its staff on. It does not recruit other businesses.
Every review comes from a verified person, about a real business or one of its employees. No anonymous posts and no fakes. A business builds its reputation review by review, and so does every worker, and the record can be trusted precisely because everyone behind it is confirmed real.
An individual's account is far more than a login. It is the real, verified record of who they are: their work history, the businesses they have been part of, and the positive reputation they have earned over time, all owned by them and carried anywhere they go. For the first time a person's good name is theirs to keep and to prove, instead of scattered across platforms that do not belong to them. And when they invite the business they work for onto Bitword, they keep 30% of its monthly subscription for as long as it stays, so building their identity and earning from the platform become the same act.
Underneath the accounts and the revenue is the real reason Bitword exists: more positive moments between people. Every time someone gives a genuine, positive review, two smiles are created, one for the person who receives it and one for the person who gave it. The platform counts them, and credits both smiles to everyone who made the moment possible, the employee, the business they work for, and the corporate partner above them, because all three played a part. It turns ordinary good service into something the whole world can watch add up. So the very same growth that builds businesses, accounts, and revenue is, at its heart, a global push toward more kindness, more recognition, and more joy, measured one smile at a time. The faster it grows, the happier the picture gets.
Jobs on a verified map are quietly one of the most valuable parts: real openings, real employers, real applicants. And because a review can only come from a verified account, every review someone leaves brings another real person onto the platform. Trust and growth come from the same act.
The platform pays a share of every subscription back to the corporate partner who brought that member on. So the building is done by the partners: they bring on businesses directly, and they bring on people, and each of those people invites the business they work for. Businesses themselves do not recruit other businesses; their part is reviews and their own staff. The growth is simply the number of corporate partners, times the people they capture, times how many of those people invite a business.
Each of those people keeps 30% of the subscription of the business they invite; each corporate partner earns its share of everything beneath it. Everyone building it is paid to, which is why it fills quickly, and because businesses and the best words are finite and claimed once, the earliest movers capture the most.
Now that the idea is clear, the companion pages show exactly what a specific organization, a league, a team, a church, a brand, can capture and earn on Bitword.
Illustrative and explanatory. A new platform, described in plain terms, not a guarantee of outcomes.