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sorry, no pic available. Now, without the flowery language, are you interested in explaining your thoughts on services with respect to your earlier post? Quote:
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BTW- Stating that your manager can increase productivity more than you can through effective management of several subordinates, thus increasing his value- explain to me how this differs from an upline/downline relationship in an MLM? Quote:
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Bees
Bees Bees Killer Bee Killed YOU GOT TO FIGHT THE POWER! FIGHT THE POWER! FIGHT THE POWERFUL BEE! |
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Clearly we have very different codes of ethics, you and I. I feel that it is wrong for anyone (company or individual) to take advantage of another person's trust, desperation, etc... particularly for their own selfish gain. Most MLMs are built on a foundation of exactly that. Yes, so are many corporations... and yes, those companies are evil too. Labelling something as "BS" just because you disagree doesn't make it so. |
For his next act, hot pastrami will try to un-brainwash a Scientologist. :)
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My secretary and one of my friend's kids are Partylite Candle Nazis. I have a lot of fucking candles to burn in the house, but have thusfar avoided the pitch to become one of the pod people.
I also have one degree of separation from a Mary Kay Commando. I don't have any great need to buy makeup that isn't in one kit of brown, green, and black, so I think I'm safe. |
Lookout, LOL you got me. I should have qualified my statement to include in an MLM context, but I didn't. Good point. Kudos to you for having that ability.
Let me reiterate- my experience with MLM's is almost entirely due to the time I spent with two successful Amway distributors. I do not in any way purport myself in any way to understand or have more than a cursory knowledge of most other MLM's except Tupperware. Pastrami, When I read the entire article you pulled this quote from, the preceding comment to your quote reads: Quote:
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[quote]Clearly we have very different codes of ethics, you and I. I feel that it is wrong for anyone (company or individual) to take advantage of another person's trust, desperation, etc... particularly for their own selfish gain. Most MLMs are built on a foundation of exactly that. Yes, so are many corporations... and yes, those companies are evil too. QUOTE] Actually, pastrami, I don't feel that we are so diametrically opposed in views. I do feel that, for the most part, the vast majority of MLM's are built on what you described. I feel it is despicable to treat people in this manner. My whole point is that IN MY EXPERIENCE AND OPINION, Amway is not built on this ethos. The corporation is very committed to creating a professional, transparent and long-term opportunity. Unfortunately, due to their exposure, and the fact that they have existed for so long, they have had more than their fair share of crooks and slimeballs infest their ranks. Unfortunately the bad apples are all that people remember. The reality is that these people usually don't last too long, but their scent lingers. I agree with the FTC website, and I have stated some of their warnings myself previously. Again, I re-state my position that I in no way base my comments on these MLM's that I have no knowledge about. |
sorry guyute. i have too much experience with amway and its representatives over the last 15 years to buy a word of it. Yes, people make money. but they make it by selling the kit and training materials. in the long term, the amount of money you get from all the fabulously overpriced merch will start to add up, but only after you have a sufficient downline of misled people looking for a pot of gold. for anyone in amway to make money, there must be a substantial base of people who are not making money. those people on the lowest tier supply the funding for everything else.
this fact is disguised under an onslaught of psychobabble and motivational pseudo-religious claptrap that keeps the fish on the hook when otherwise he would've wiggled off long before and gotten a real job. |
This has been such an interesting thread! I'll bet all you intelligent folks would love to make some extra money on the side, and maybe even quit your dayjob to focus on your own business! Haha, just kidding.
Seriously, perth, do you remember those friends of ours we knew a long time ago who were always on the next scam? I don't want to mention their names, but I believe they did so well that they were able to sell their brand new home for another home, only this one was a trailer. Not ripping on folks who live in trailers, but these guys were always pitching something to us. We got so tired of saying no, we just stopped hanging out with them. And, not surprisingly, they never called us anymore, after they realized we didn't want to join in their *success* or buy their products. Plus, they had this kid who just looked really creepy. Do you guys remember Cutko? Espiol? I got sucked into one of these "interviews" once when I was 19, but since then, the pattern always seems the same. Mine was some sort of life insurance. How does a nineteen year old waitress sell life insurance? I know there is a difference between the true MLM scams and businesses like Avon, Pampered Chef, etc. Somehow, I think some of the same problems exist with these, like the tendency to alienate and make uncomfortable your family and friends. My cousin has a tendency to get sucked into these. She tried to hook me with Espiol and Equinox. She was SO convinced she was going to make it rich. Now she "sells" Pampered Chef. Not to knock the products, because they are good, usually, but I hate getting invited to a friend's house only to get trapped into an hour's worth of guilt tactics designed to sell kitchen products. Usually, if I really need a magic pancake flipper, I will go to Bed Bath and Beyond and buy one. I refuse to buy any of this stuff from my cousin, partially because I have no need for Pampered Chef, partially because she is really fucking annoying, and partially because I expect a barrage of born-again jesus-obsession babble to go along with-scratch that-dominate the conversation. (Yes, she is one of those, too) |
No need to be sorry, mrnoodle. Oh well. To paraphrase pastrami,
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The products do indeed rock, I have two of the knives in the auto-sharpener cases, a small prep knife, and one that Tony Perkins could have wielded with pride. I also have a bunch of the $1 paring/utility knives. Those babies will cut anything, but I would like them better if the would have provided a better blade cover than the cardboard one it comes with. Heck, I'd pay an extra fifty cents, even. Their unglazed clay bakeware is the coolest thing since sliced bread, and in fact, you can make some happenin' unsliced bread by using their pizza stone as a baking stone ... I did annoy one Pampered Chef lady by letting other "guests" know that an identical ice cream scoop to their $15 one with the antifreeze in the handle was available at Ikea for a buck. In case you were wondering, I only own two Longaberger Baskets. Three if you count the one I gave to my mom ... |
Yes, the baking stones are quite groovy. Maybe my problem is my lack of skills in the kitchen.
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Easily overcome by a good cookbook, patience, and many dozens of eggs.
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Never enough money earned by the product line to justify that investment. Classic pyramid scheme. Sold only on what it can do for you and not what it provides to society. If society gets no benefit, then there is no product. The investors don't even get franchise benefits other than to sell franchises to other 'investors'. Nobody concentrates on selling the products. There is no money in selling products. Selling the franchise - not the product - is where almost all money is made. Even with lots of franchises sold, the product from those franchises amounts to near zero profits. Buy a Fiat. You will own product from the fastest growing car company in the world. Right. Where does he even promote the product? He does not. He promotes a scam that is really irrelevant to the product. Carly Fiorina did same to promote the purchase of Compaq. She justified everything in terms of "HP and Compaq will be the biggest market in this business and second largest in that business". Does size (and the lie about 'economies of scale') mean stockholder value? Of course not. There was no product advantage to the HP merger with Compaq. All but the institutional investors (MBAs) understood that. Obvious because the deal provided no 'product'. Fiorina promoted a scam by selling something that provided no advantage to the HP product line nor provided HP customers with new or better products. Fiorina promoted the classic MBA scam using spread sheet spin. And that is also what the Amway, et al scheme is all about. Finance spin because there is no money to be earned on the product line. |
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