One of the things that upline taught as important to the Amway business was to be accountable. Or if you said something, you should do it. In a sense it makes sense for people to be accountable in business. Be good for your word. I think it’s a common sense aspect of business.
Except that upline diamonds have an unwritten rule of “rules for thee, but not for me”. Has any diamond taken responsibility for the boards of people who join Amway, invest time and money and put in an honest effort only to lose money and fail. Upline always has sone excuse as to why the IBO failed such as they didn’t work hard enough or they didn’t follow the upline advice just right.
Seems like upline always has a convenient excuse for down line failures which always excludes blaming the bad advice they offered to down line. It’s not like everyone who joins was lazy or didn’t follow the advice. Many do precisely what upline advises but they give themselves losing money month after month because they system is flawed. The system has never churned our regular success. Success is more of an aberration than something that can be counted.
Of course, upline is quick to credit themselves and the system whenever there is any success to speak of. It’s almost humorous. But when you think of how much cash is raked in at functions, the amount of success is extremely insignificant. You seriously would have just as good a chance buying a lottery ticket but a lottery ticket doesn’t take any effort. Yes, Amway is not a game of chance but when the results of a business resembles a game of chance, what does that say about the business?
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1 comment:
Your Amway up-line cannot (on principle) ever admit to doing something that was mistaken or wrong, or which led to an IBO losing money or failing. If they did admit it, it would puncture the balloon of Amway's perfection. It would open the door for IBOs to then ask other questions about what the hell is actually going on in the Amway racket. And one thing your up-line doesn't want is any questions.
Amway is a business cult, and a cult means a variety of religion. In a religion you don't question your faith or your dogmas. You are passionately loyal to them, and you defend them to the hilt. Why do you think that asshole Dexter Yager ran around functions screaming "DO YOU BELIEVE? DO YOU BELIEVE?"
In Amway, the main religious dogma is "The Plan." This "Plan" can never be wrong, never be altered, and never honestly debated. It follows from this that if the "Plan" doesn't work for some IBOs, then those IBOs did something wrong. Their failure was their fault, and not the Plan's fault.
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