The Truth Behind the Smoke and Mirrors of
Multi-Level
and Network Marketing
(and those who say they are not yet operate exactly like one)
By Winston Wu
Introduction
To
Whom It May Concern,
Hello
my name is Winston. At sometime in our
lives, we have been or are likely to be approached by recruiters of Multi-Level
Marketing (MLM) and Network Marketing (NM) organizations, promising a great new
business opportunity that only takes a few hours a week and yet will eventually
net you a thousand dollars a week to put you on the road to becoming
financially independent. As many of us
know, the biggest of these organizations is Amway,
followed by many smaller copycats, each with their own variations, all trying
to make you think they're better than the other. If the recruiter is a stranger to you, he/she
will usually strike up a friendly conversation with you and then ask you if you
like the work you're in, and go from there.
Many of you have probably had this experience. There are even MLM's that strictly operate on
the internet now. Even if you've never
been approached by them in person, if you use the internet then you have
probably been incessantly bombarded with junk email soliciting get-rich
business opportunities that all claim they are better than the rest. Most of them are MLM's, pyramid schemes or
chain letters in disguise. (As reference
to them, I shall mostly use the term MLM rather than NM because it is more
commonly known, although they are basically the same.) MLM's are notorious for presenting to you a
barrage of smoke and mirrors that mislead you with hype and emotionalism that
feeds on your deepest needs while subduing your reason and common sense. They usually start with catchy lines like "Are you tired of working for someone
else?" and "Would you like
to be your own boss?" followed by "How
would you like to earn an extra thousand dollars a week in your spare
time?" and "What if you
could do this part time while keeping your regular job?" Fortunately, many now see through the
smoke and mirrors, but as P.T. Barnum and others once said "There's a sucker born every minute." Those who buy into this hype don't think
critically through all the smoke and mirrors enough to see them for what they
really are. Therefore, I'm writing this
article to expose these operations to counteract their brainwashing for that
those of you who are still unclear about them or want to understand what they
are and how they work. This article is
for anyone who is either considering joining one or who is already in one and open to understanding what they are really involved
with.
I
remember the first time I went to an MLM meeting in
Being
skeptical yet open minded, a few years later at the invitation of a friend, I
went to another "business opportunity" seminar which turned out to be
Amway. It was held in a big auditorium in
More
recently, last year I went to many meetings to check out Market America, which boasted the best business plan ever. They were very convincing, but eventually I
saw through it as well. I was too
calculating and analytical to seriously get involved. After simple research, I saw their BS and
realized that I have a conscience as well.
I then read articles on MLM's, testimonials of former MLMers, and used
common sense to arrive at the conclusions in this article. In addition, I am a great critical thinker
and very familiar with forms of mind control, brainwashing, and sales tactics
because I have been exposed to so many.
Therefore,
I feel that I am a good candidate to educate people on this. (You can read my other critical
thinking/debunking articles at
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news/truth_about_sears.htm and http://www.victorzammit.com/skeptics/winston.html.) I would like to share with you the truth
about MLM's and how their system really works behind their smoke and
mirrors. Note from the subtitle above
that what I'm also exposing includes those organizations and schemes that will
say that they're not MLM or NM, yet they still OPERATE just like them at the
nuts and bolts level. (sneaky bastards)
After you understand how MLM's operate, you'll be able to recognize
MLM's no matter what they say about themselves.
Remember that an MLM is an MLM because of their business system, not because of what they say! I will try to make this as concise yet
thorough as possible. If you want to
understand them, don't listen solely to those in it whose agenda is to recruit you
into their downline for profit motives or make you a customer. They will give you a selectively revealed
smoke and mirrors presentation of it that manipulates and feeds on your
desires. Instead, listen to someone who
will tell it like it is without any self-interest in it, and then listen to
their version as well, and make up your own mind. There is really only one simple thing you
need to know to understand why MLM's are a corrupt system, and all we will use
to understand it is simple arithmetic, which will be explained later on. But first, let me lay out a few preliminaries
that you ought to know.
Escaping the Negative
Connotation of MLM
The
first important thing I want to point out is that just because a business
opportunity SAYS that they're not an MLM doesn't mean they aren't one or that
they don't operate like one. Since the
terms "multi-level marketing" and "network marketing" have
negative connotations among the public, many MLM's will try to disassociate
themselves from that term by trying to convince you that they are not MLM's or
else a special type of MLM that's different from the rest. (Gee I wonder
why) They will even bash the concept of
MLM's at their presentations by acknowledging the past failures and
frustrations of audience members who were involved in MLM's before. This is really a psychological tactic of
agreeing and empathizing with you to give you the impression that they're on
your side, and it disassociates themselves from your negative impression of
MLM's as well.
As
a rule of thumb, if something has a bad connotation in society or is viewed
negatively by the public, then there is usually a very good reason for
that. Of course, some MLM's will attempt
to get around this by claiming that the MLM concept is misunderstood and
misused by scams and pyramid schemes out there (which no MLM ever admits to
being one themselves of course). Every
organization, cult, or group with a bad reputation among the public has said
something like that, so what's new? In
order to expand the MLM with more downline recruits or business partners (a
term they now use to sound so generic that it could mean anything), they have
to distinguish themselves from the negative connotation of MLM's and Amway among the public, otherwise they
couldn't survive. Yet when it comes down
to it, they will still operate with the same system an MLM does!
So
keep in mind that just because a wonderful "new business opportunity"
tells you that it's not MLM or NM doesn't mean that it's not. The key is in how they OPERATE, not what they
say. It's the same concept in principle
as the saying "actions speak louder than words". Since MLM's have a high turnover rate, (97%
failure rate according to the Direct Selling Association <www.dsa.org>)
they require a high recruitment rate as well, in order to survive. Spouting a lot of smoke and mirrors, shifting
terms that have negative connotations, and hyping people up is necessary to
maintain a high recruitment rate. After
reading this article and understanding how the MLM business system works, you
should be able to recognize and spot these deceptive schemes immediately. If it uses the same SYSTEM and PLAN that
MLM's do, then it's an MLM. Simple as
that.
Shifting Terms Around to
Hide in Obscurity
Many
MLM's now also shift around other terms as well. For example, the MLM I was tentatively
involved, Market America
(www.marketamerica.com), claimed that their business plan is not MLM but rather
"The binomial system of linear
management", to sound like a generic but new business term that no one
has any prior preconceptions of. Fancy
phrases like these can mean almost anything and help them hide in
obscurity. Even the well-known Amway calls their new subsidiary
Quixstar to hide the bad reputation of Amway. Quixstar is also described as "internet commerce" rather
than MLM, which obscures it with all the rest of the businesses that do
business over the internet. When asked
about the differences between them and MLM's, they will usually cite trivial
differences which don't really matter to the crux of the system, because the
way the system works is still inherently the same. It is easy to claim that you are not
something by citing trivial differences.
For instance, a timeshare company in
Smoke and Mirrors, Selective
Revelation and Mind Control
Unfortunately,
you often don't find out that a "new business opportunity" is an MLM
unless you first go to some presentations, meetings or pay for expensive
seminars. This is because before you can
learn the nuts and bolts of the business plan, you have to be hyped up with the
smoke and mirrors first, which is their process of selective revelation that
they're taught to present to prospective new recruits. The smoke and mirrors consist of diatribes of
how wonderful and easy it is to make money in your spare time, the benefits of
being on the road to financial independence, becoming your own boss, etc.
followed by testimonials of those whose lives were dramatically changed,
claiming that if they can do it then anyone can. You learn virtually nothing about the details
of the business plan from this, but yet this is how the MLM's teach their
distributors to present the plan to new prospects. If you look at the introduction brochures for
MLM's for example, they contain mostly hype, leading questions with hot
keywords, etc. and nothing about how the business plan works or even what it
is. (An obvious red flag.) In fact, MLM
distributor manuals usually instruct distributors to use this process of
selective revelation. For example, the
person who was to be my key upline in Market
America constantly emphasized that we are never to reveal too much when
first mentioning the business. (as a rule of thumb, that's a very bad
sign) Instead, we were taught to keep an
aura of mystery until they came to a meeting to be shown the business plan in a
group setting.
You
might wonder why they have to follow this order of selective revelation. The answer is simple and you might hit
yourself over the head once you realize it.
If they showed you the whole business plan upfront and you evaluated it
objectively, then you are likely to turn away because the business system at
its nuts and bolts level turns a lot of people off. Instead, you need to be hyped up emotionally
first and get excited enough to not evaluate the system too logically or
practically. This is accomplished by
taking you to a meeting consisting of motivational speeches, emotionalism,
enthusiasm, inspiration, etc. all in a group setting to maximize the chances of
persuading you to get involved. In
addition, the group setting of the atmosphere also serves as a strong
reinforcement to the hype, since we naturally conform to the group we're in by
instinct, which in this case is cheering and agreeing with everything the
speaker says. Furthermore, these
meetings also serve the double purpose of keeping the current distributors
motivated and "high". These
factors maximize their chances of psychologically manipulating and motivating
you to join in. As a result, you are
more likely to go along with the business plan and become involved. All this is an old form of mind control to
subdue your logical and practical side.
It's not in their interest to have you evaluate the plan objectively
without hyping you up emotionally in a group setting first. That's why MLM presentations are ALWAYS
revealed in this order. Do you think
it's a good sign if they have to subdue your practical reasoning abilities
first in order to persuade you?
Shouldn't a good system be able to sell itself?
What One Must Be Willing to
Sacrifice to Succeed in an MLM
Now
I am not saying that you can't get rich or make a lot of money from MLM's. You obviously can, and some people do. However, if you are considering joining one
or investing your time and money in one, you should keep in mind that there are
several things you must be willing to sacrifice in order to succeed. You have to be willing to:
1) Live and breathe the MLM business. Only those that do tend to succeed and truly
profit. It has to come before everything
else consistently.
2) See all your family, relatives, friends, and
acquaintances as business prospects.
In order to make it, you have to both sell some of the products and
recruit a certain number of downline or business partners as well, which
creates pressure on you to recruit anyone you know. So of course, you'd better hope you have a
lot of contacts! Unfortunately, this
leads to alienating a lot of people from you, because those who are not
interested will feel uncomfortable around the constant pressure and persuasion
from you. In effect, you begin to see
others in terms of how useful they are to you and your MLM. Thus you start preferring to spend your free
time with prospective new MLM recruits, rather than your friends and loved
ones, which alienates them from you even more.
3) Pay several hundred dollars a year to go
to required local and national business seminars and conferences. These usually contain nothing but hype,
motivation speeches, testimonials, and new improved methods of selling and
recruiting. In other words, you don't
TECHNICALLY really learn anything new at these required business seminars. Your upline will not tell you this of
course. If you ask them what you will
learn, they will just say "It's a great seminar that will help you succeed
in this business! Just come. You'll see!
Do you want to be your own boss or not?" (very irritating for
someone like me who wants specifics) The
REAL purpose of these required business seminars is to keep you motivated and
inspired with staying in the business, and collect some extra revenue in the
process as well. After all, the turnover
rate in MLM's is very high, and would be even higher without these large scale
rallies and seminars. This is sad though
because most people in MLM's (look up statistics for Amway distributors on the internet from independent sources) don't
make that much and these fees alone sap up most or all of their profits.
4) Know that no matter how much you profit
off this business, it is inevitable that more than half of your downline must
ultimately fail. (explained in detail below) This is the heart of my argument against
MLM's, because this fact alone makes them shady scams in my opinion.
If
you're willing to accept all four of these consequences and have no problem
with it, then perhaps you are the right person for this type of business. Personally though, I don't admire people who
live and breathe only one thing and are obsessed with it. People like that are not interesting and
don't have much diversity, and plus it's not mentally healthy to be obsessed
with just one thing, no matter how good it is. (I don't deny though, that being
obsessed with something to the point of living and breathing it greatly
increases your chances at succeeding at it.)
I also don't like people who only like you if you're part of their
MLM. It demeans a true friendship and is
so wrong. A true friend likes you for
you, not for how you can benefit their business or not. I thought that the person who recruited me
for an MLM was a real friend, but he turned out to lose interest in me as soon
as he realized that I wasn't going to be a serious part of his MLM
operation. That was a real disappointer
and a lesson to choose your friends wisely.
I also would feel ripped off to be required to pay for expensive
seminars that don't teach you anything new knowledge-wise, except to keep you
motivated to stay in the scam, and also profit the organization on the
side. I also would not feel good knowing
that I'm making money off the failure of the majority of my downline, which is
a mathematical certainty once you understand the system nuts and bolts of how
MLM's work. It would make me feel like I
was part of a scam.
The Nuts and Bolts of the
MLM Business System
Here
where the critical information starts.
I'm going to explain to you in very simple terms how the nuts and bolts
operation of MLM's work. This is the
real technical gist of the system without all the smoke and mirrors. Now each MLM sells their own variation of
products. Some specialize in certain
types of products such as weight loss/nutrition products, alternative medicine,
or comfort apparatuses, while others have a whole wide variety of products to
choose from, such as Amway. Many of these products may be high in quality
and beneficial to use.
However,
they are almost always vastly overpriced, which is necessary in order to pay
commissions to the seller and bonuses to his/her upline. Usually, you could get the same type of
products for less through other means, including retail stores, outlets,
discount stores, close-outs, Ebay, etc.
They will tell you though that it's not the same of course, but what
else would they say? Search around and
so some research and I'm sure you could find comparable products for far less
prices. I don't want to over-generalize
here though, there may always be exceptions, but no matter how good their
products are, it doesn't justify a shady and misleading business plan covered
by smoke and mirrors. Remember to be
skeptical of information you get from those with an agenda or special interest
involved. As MLM critics like to point
out, what they are really selling here are not the products, but the dream of
becoming financially independent.
The
biggest LIE they will all tell you is that "You don't have to be a good at selling
to succeed in this business." which is usually in response to the
common objection "What if I can't sell?" Nothing could be further from the truth. Obviously, money does not grow on trees and
it does not come from nowhere. In order
for profits to come in, someone MUST BUY the products! Anyone with the slightest amount of common
sense knows this. One way or another,
you have to get people to buy the product, or you have to find someone who is
very good at it to be your downline. And
this is not a one time sell either, you and your downline must find people who
are willing to buy your minimum product volume on a REGULAR BASIS! Even if you're a great recruiter and recruit
a hundred people, no one will make any money unless the products of the MLM are
sold on a regular basis. That is an
indisputable hard core FACT, and the MLM's will hold this fact from you as long
as possible, because this alone discourages most people from getting
involved.
In
fact, whether or not a “downline” is required is usually the deciding factor in
determining whether the MLM system is a fraud or not. Robert Fitzpatrick, the nation’s MLM expert, and author of False Profits (www.FalseProfits.com and www.pyramidschemealert.org)
explained to me:
“The fraud in multi-level marketing is not in the products. Some
MLMs sell gold. Most sell products that are at least legitimate, if not fairly
priced or accurately represented.
The fraud lies in the pay plan and business model. If profit depends primarily
upon building a downline, rather than on retail selling to end-user, it is a
fraud. If the majority of people who make a profit do it from overrides on the
purchases or sales of their downline rather than from their own retails sales
to their own retail customers, it is a fraud.
In a recruitment-based business, that is, one in which the primary means of
making a profit requires recruiting other sales people, only a tiny percentage
-- usually less than one percent -- will ever be profitable. Usually in such
systems, this unfair and deceptive trade practice is made even worse by
formulas in which the people at the upper layers of the pyramid get most of the
commissions from the work of those at the bottom -- the ones who are the last
to be recruited. This only
reinforces the recruitment nature of the scam.
To determine if you are in a fraud -- a deceptive scheme in which the profit of
the people at the top comes from the losses of the latest recruits -- you need
to investigate these two factors (1) do most of the people who make a
profit, earn it from retail sales? (2) does the pay plan reward the people at
the top proportionately greater than the people making the sales.
Incidentally, if the business plan of this company "has the same basic
system as Amway " it is a fraud. Less than 18% of all Amway products are
ever resold to real consumers. Over 80% is purchased only by the sales people.
Less than 1% of Amway sales people ever earn a profit. They make their money by
deceptively recruiting other salespeople with false
promises about "income opportunity." Their profit is directly tied to
the losses of the latest recruits.”
Now
here is how the MLM operation works.
When you first join an MLM and become a licensed distributor, you pay a
license fee anywhere from $100 to $200 (varies among MLM's) and you usually
have to sign a contract to agree to buy a certain product volume each month or
quarter (also varies) to sell or keep yourself if you want to use them. You then become technically part of the
downline of the person who recruited you. (internet MLM's have a new term
called "powerline" now) The downline basically branches out into a
pyramid-like form which looks like this.
We will designate you as person number 7 below.
Downline
1
2
3
4
5 6 *7* (you)
As
you can see, you are part of a pyramid structure with person number 3 as your
direct upline. (MLM's are also fond of saying that they're not a "pyramid
scheme", however as you can see above they still have a pyramid STRUCTURE
to it!) Now person number 3 and those in
your upline will coach and motivate you to create your own downline pyramid as
well. It is in their interest to do so,
as the larger your downline grows, the larger theirs grows as well, profiting
both you and them. After becoming an
official downline, your immediate objectives are now to 1) find customers who
will buy your minimum required product volume on a regular basis (or else
you'll have to keep it yourself!) and 2) find a few new business partners who
will sign up to do the same as well.
MLM's such as Market America
say that the minimum partners you should recruit are at least two solid
motivated performers who will expand the downline further. So let's take the minimum requirement of
finding two business partners for your downline in order to succeed, and map
out what it looks like below. We will
designate you as number 1. For reference
to downline levels, we will now name everyone in each level with the
corresponding number of the level.
Levels
1
(you)
2
2 (business partners or
downline)
Now
your task will be to train your downline to do the same as you did, with the
same two objectives described above. As each
person fulfills these minimum requirements, eventually your pyramid downline
will double at each succeeding level, and look like this.
Levels
1 (you)
2 2 (your direct downline)
3 3
3 3 (their direct downline)
4 4
4 4 4
4 4 4
(their direct downline)
................................. (and so on)
Now,
everything will be fine and dandy as long as you and most or all of your
downline continues to 1) buy a certain product volume each period to markup and
sell, or keep themselves (often, distributors become customers as well),
resulting in commissions for you and those above the seller, and 2) those at
the lowest level of the downline continue recruiting more downline to expand
their own business. As long as those two
things continue, everyone will reap points and commissions which result in
paychecks after a certain point is reached, depending on the MLM. Those with downlines are rewarded with bonus
points or commissions for the sales of their downlines as well. This can add up and multiply very nicely with
a vast downline, and is the biggest payoff of being in an MLM. This is where you achieve the MLM dream of
multiplying your profits from other people working under you. The commission plan, reward incentives, and
pay structure varies among different MLM's of course, but it's not necessary
for me to list specific figures and percentages from any particular MLM for the
purpose of this discussion. The way the
downlines branch out also varies among different MLM's but the system is always
basically the same regardless. What is
basically being created is a "pyramid of buyers". Unlike regular businesses however, this
pyramid of buyers are all in the business of duplicating more downline for
themselves. What's being sold are not
primarily the products, but the dreams of becoming financially
independent. Of course, you can also
make some markup profits from selling the products alone, but you wouldn't reap
the big profits they promised unless you sold an astronomical amount, which
they would tell you as well.
At
first glance, this looks like a very profitable enterprise and plan. However, once you use some basic arithmetic,
you find out something shocking which the MLM's will NEVER EVER tell you no
matter how long you're in it! This leads
us to the next part below, which is at the heart of why MLM's are shady schemes
which ultimately fail for the majority of those in it.
The Mathematical Certainty
of the Failure of the Majority Involved In MLM's
Now
we've come to the most important part of this article that lies at the heart of
why MLM's are inherently flawed and must fail.
If you've seen the movie "Titanic" you might remember that the
ship's engineer told Kate Winslet that "The
ship will sink. It's a mathematical
certainty." Well the same
applies to this case as well. It is a MATHEMATICAL CERTAINTY that more
than 50 percent of those involved in MLM's MUST ultimately fail. This fact alone makes the system a scam
no matter how much money you make from it.
Once you realize this, you'll understand why this whole business system
that makes great promises is really an inherently flawed and unstable economic structure
that will cause a lot of frustration, disappointment, and lost money for the
majority of those gullible enough to bank their dreams and future on it. All it takes to understand this is basic
arithmetic. Allow me to
demonstrate.
As
we discussed above, in our example of the layout of the basic MLM system you
recruit two downline partners to sell a certain product volume and recruit two
partners of their own as well, doubling the distributors at each downline
level. However, since there is not an
infinite number of people in this world, the levels cannot continue
geometrically doubling forever, and at some point there won't be enough people
in the world to double to the next level.
If we assign numbers to the downline levels, then in this case at level
31, there wouldn't be enough left in the world to double to level 32 without
re-recruiting the people above. If you
did that, then the population of level 32 (not including the population of the
levels above it) will be 4,294,967,296.
That's about 4.3 billion people not counting the levels above, with some
recruited twice! Since there are
approximately 6 billion people in this world, there aren't enough people left
on Earth for the 8.6 billion needed to double to level 33! There
aren't enough people left on Earth! This
is what the structure would look like.
Levels
1 (one person)
2 2 (doubles to two people)
3
3 3 3
(doubles to four people)
4 4
4 4 4
4 4 4
(doubles to eight people)
(and
continued so on)
..................................
..................................
Level 32 * (population at 4.3 billion)
*
Level 32 includes double recruitment of those above. No further expansion to Level 33 is possible. There are not enough people in the world for
the 8.6 billion people required.
Now,
since level 32 cannot double to level 33, the distributors in that level, which
outnumber all the distributors in levels 1-31, MUST fail the business! Even if level 32 re-recruited the people in
the levels above and combine them with the population of the rest of the world,
that still wouldn't be enough to make 8.6 billion! In fact, level 31 would not even be able to
double to level 32 in the first place without re-recruiting some of the people
above level 31 again! (since the total population of the downline up to level
31 at 3+ billion does not leave enough people left in the world for the 4.3
billion required for level 32) Even if
you were to continue re-recruiting the same people over and over again, it
still doesn't solve the saturation of the geometric expansion. And this represents the base case scenario
too! What this means is that even in the BEST CASE SCENARIO, the majority
are still guaranteed to fail! Think
about that. What does it tell you about a
system where even in the best case scenario, the majority are doomed to
fail? That more than anything is
the most revealing flaw of this system.
It's very apparent and revealed by simple arithmetic.
Now
here's the key. Realistically we know
that MLM's don't take over the world and they stop somewhere between level 1
and 32 with each downline branch stopping at different levels. But it doesn't matter, because at ANYWHERE
the downline levels stop at between level 1 and 32, the population of the
lowest level without a downline will ALWAYS be more than half of the sum total
of the population of all the levels above it (including level 32). This is why the majority of those involved
MUST always fail, regardless of how they perform. Of course, in reality different branches of
the downline will stop at different levels depending on various factors such as
performance and the saturation point of each geographic location of the
downline branches. But this is
inconsequential, because no matter which level each branch stops at, the sum
total of all the people on the level with no downline beneath them will ALWAYS
equal more than the combined total of people in the levels above them! ALWAYS!
You can test this out yourself and do the math by drawing out the
downline levels as in the example above, along with the population at each
level. Then stop the branches at various
points (it doesn't matter where) along the levels, and add up those at the
levels with no downline beneath them, and those in all the levels above
them. You will get the same results
every time! No one, not even the richest
and most eloquent MLM speaker, can dispute the mathematical certainty of
this. The bottom line here is that THE MAJORITY MUST FAIL in ANY scenario!
That alone makes this system a scam no matter how much money you
make from it. How would you feel knowing
this and getting involved in it? How
would you feel knowing that more than half the downline you are trying to motivate
will fail?
One
argument that MLMers frequently make is that if MLM's were doomed to be
saturated, then they wouldn't still be around.
This is a gross misunderstanding of what we're talking about here. When critics of MLM's refer to saturation,
what we mean is that the number of people who will succeed at it will reach a
saturation point. Since MLMers
constitute a minority in society, they will always be able to find new recruits
among the rest of the population. After
all, people are born everyday. Contrary
to what they tell you though, long-standing MLM's do not grow steadily without
drop. They are in a forever state of
expansion and contraction cycles, as a result of their high turnover and high
recruitment rate. They will continue to
exist as long as they are able to maintain their high recruitment rate, which
they constantly struggle to do using methods like those described above such as
smoke and mirrors, shifting self-described terminologies, and mind control in a
group setting. (With so many
disappointed people accumulated, why else do you think they have earned such a
bad reputation so much by now that they have to hide their association with
"multi-level marketing"?) And
those at the high upline levels can maintain a stable position and steady
income as long as replacements for the high turnover rate continue at the
bottom. All of this is inconsequential
to the fact that the majority must still fail.
Conclusion
Now
that you know the truth about the nuts and bolts system of MLM's and NM's
WITHOUT the smoke and mirrors, it's up to you to decide whether you want to
become involved in it. Yes you may get
rich or become independently wealthy if you get in the pyramid structure at a
high level early on before it saturates, but would your conscience feel good
knowing that more than half the people below you must ultimately fail and lose
money? Is that how you want to make
money? It's up to you. I can tell you though, that if you are
already involved in an MLM and you bring up the points of this article to your
upline, he/she would undoubtedly say "Don't listen to the naysayers. They just don't want to see you succeed at
something they don't believe in. Some people
just like to criticize success because they are envious and don't want to work
as hard." or "Listen to people who have made it in this business and
learn from them. What would you have to
learn from a misinformed critic?" and all that type of smoke and mirrors
that misses and dodges the points.
However, think about this. If they
can't address the points that articles like this make, but can only try to
distract you with more smoke and mirrors, what does that tell you? Is that a red flag that something's wrong? Think about it. I rest my case.
Thanks
for reading. Take care and remember to
not be gullible! :)
Regards,
Winston
Any
questions or comments about this article can be sent to me by email at WWu777@aol.com.
Links For Further
If
you would like to read and learn more in detail about MLM's, here are some
recommended links.
What’s
Wrong With Multi-Level Marketing?
http://www.vandruff.com/mlm.html?FACTNet
Quatloos!
guide to Multi-Level Markting
http://www.quatloos.com/mlm/mlm.htm
About
MLM’s in general
http://www.mlmsurvivor.com/enter2.htm
Book
and link about multi-level marketing
The
Ten Big Lies of Multi-Level Marketing
http://www.mlmsurvivor.com/fitzpatrick.htm
Why Nearly Everyone Loses
Money in MLM, but So Many Keep Trying
http://www.falseprofits.com/Lessons%20from%20the%20Pyramids.html
The
US Postal Service’s warning on multi-level marketing
http://www.usps.com/websites/depart/inspect/pyramid.htm
Pyramid Scheme Alert on NBC
News
http://www.pyramidschemealert.org/news/nbc.htm
ABC
News Story: Paying for a Potential Payoff - Multimillion-Dollar
Scam Exploits Thousands of Women
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/wnt/DailyNews/gifting_scam021101.html
Skeptic’s
Dictionary entry on Multi-Level Marketing
http://www.skepdic.com/mlm.html
Skeptic’s
Dictionary entry on Amway
http://www.skepdic.com/amway.html
Internet
Society Of Ex-Amway Distributors With Web-Pages
http://www.ex-cult.org/Groups/Amway/otherside/links.htm
Articles on Amway
http://www.ex-cult.org/Groups/Amway/otherside/?FACTNet
Contains
links to sites about Amway
http://www.factnet.org/coerlink.htm