One of the things my Amway upline said at nearly every meeting, function or night owl was how we were helping people by sharing the dream and showing others the Amway plan. "Helping people". He claimed that IBOs became better people and were doing good for the community by helping people. I always thought this was odd because the only people we really "helped" were those who got into the business. We didn't hang out with or help anyone else. We certainly didn't do anything for the community or for charities. It's more like Amway IBOs are actually helping themselves in reality.
How do you help someone when your life is dedicated to buying and selling Amway products, recruiting Amway prospects and attending Amway related meetings to learn how to recruit more Amway IBOs and to motivate yourself to never quit the business. I used to think about people doing volunteer work, or community service projects, or even outreach through their churches. These are the real everyday heroes who are helping others. While an outreach volunteer feeds the homeless, IBOs are in meetings. When people are doing community service projects, IBOs are showing the plan or prospecting the malls for new recruits. Who is actually helping people?Yes, I am aware that IBOs at times, contribute to Easter Seals and the like, but do they invest the kind of time that others do? And I'm not faulting IBOs, but simply pointing out that the Amway business activities can eat away at your time and prevent you from spending quality time with family and friends and prevent you from actually "helping others". While the Amway business is no different that other businesses and the like in that regard, I do not feel that the tiny average earnings of IBOs make it worth their while to spend all of that time in meetings and recruiting to make their return on their investment a worthwhile activity.
So, in all of the activities you engage in as an IBO, are you helping people? Or are you only helping people who might be interested in joining your Amway business? Are you really helping them or recruiting them under the guise of helping them? Do you continue to try and help them if they aren't interested in Amway? Isn't the IBO saying, "some will", "some won't", "so what, next"? Doesn't that mean that prospects are expendable once they have said "no" to Amway? That's what I recall from my IBOs days. I really don't think much has changed.
1 comment:
When an Amway IBO (despite hard work) is losing money every month, and not getting anywhere in building a down-line, his up-line has to come up with some kind of bullshit to keep the guy in the racket. The crap about "helping others" and "becoming a better person" is that sort of distracting bullshit. It makes the IBO ignore his financial losses and think of himself as some kind of philanthropist.
It's hard to believe that people are stupid enough to fall for this kind of moralizing propaganda. But it seems to work with a lot of Ambots.
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