home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- ┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ MULTILEVEL MARKETING PROGRAMS: │
- │ LOOK BEFORE YOU LEAP │
- └─────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- Unless you have been living in a monastery most of your
- life (and perhaps even if you have), you have probably
- been offered an "opportunity" at least once to become a
- distributor in some type of multilevel, direct sales
- marketing program, such as Amway, Tupperware, Shaklee, or
- even selling blue-green algae or long-distance telephone
- services. Multilevel marketing programs have been around
- for a long time, and many of them are well established and
- quite reputable. If you are a hard-working, disciplined,
- sales-oriented person, you may be able to make a very good
- living with a good multilevel marketing company that has a
- good product. However, there are countless new multilevel
- programs being started all the time, many of which are
- more in the nature of pyramid schemes, or like chain letters,
- in which you may reap a bonanza if you get in on the ground
- floor, but in which you more likely will be one of the many
- who get in too late in the cycle and are thus left holding
- the bag, financially.
-
- Every mulitilevel program publicizes its "stars," who earn
- fabulous incomes, own large yachts, and live like royalty.
- Obviously, these people are the exception, not the rule.
- Even the National Multilevel Marketing Institute, which is
- the national trade association for the industry, concedes
- that the droput rate in such programs is about 40 percent,
- and many marketing experts suggest that number is low,
- since most people wind up spending more than they are taking
- in, and eventually decide to stop throwing good money after
- bad.
-
- Realistically, most people never get beyond the point of
- working 8 to 12 hours a week on a multilevel marketing
- program, as a sideline to their primary job or profession.
- Nevertheless, with a good product and a good program, you
- may be able to earn a nice supplemental income for your
- part-time efforts.
-
- Just be sure you don't get into the wrong type of program,
- however.
-
- Almost every multilevel program involves some kind of initial
- investment to become a participant, usually, but not always,
- for an initial supply of the product in question. The
- initial startup kit investment can range from $35 to $3,000
- or more. Obviously, you will have a lot less at stake with
- a $35 investment than with a much larger outlay.
-
- Before you sign up to become a distributor for any type of
- mulitlevel marketing program, there are a number of things
- you should first consider:
-
- . Is a large initial investment required? If so, will
- you lose that investment if you fail to make a success
- of the program? Or do you have a written promise that
- the company will return most or all of the money you
- invest in products that you are unable to sell (as the
- law requires in some states)?
-
- . Is the amount you will have to invest to get started
- more than you can afford to lose?
-
- . Have you done a realistic analysis of the market you'll
- be aiming at? Is there a real need for the product and
- if there is, is that market already well-served and
- saturated?
-
- . Do the promoters of the program rely heavily on
- emotional "rah-rah" appeals to sign up new distributors?
- And do the people who are trying to recuit you make
- wild claims that the market for their product is
- unlimited and that no one drops out of the program?
-
- . Are the products or services sold with exaggerated
- claims ("It cures cancer," etc.)? Would you and your
- family want and use the products yourself?
-
- . Is it a legitimate program, selling legitimate, quality
- products? Or is it an illegal pyramid scheme, in which
- most of the money is made by enlisting new members, not
- by moving products or services?
-
- . Does the company offer you commissions or bonuses just
- for enlisting new recruits, without your having to sell
- products or train or supervise the recruits?
-
- . Does the company claim it's been approved by the Federal
- Trade Commission or by other federal or state government
- agencies? If so, look out, as the government is not in
- the business of "approving" any such firms.
-
- . Finally, have you checked with the Better Business
- Bureau, to find out what they have heard about the
- company or program in question, if it is not one of the
- large, reputable companies like Avon or Amway?