Getting out of debt sounds like good advice. On the surface it is because people should not be racking up consumer debt or committing large sums of their income for cars and other items they simply cannot cannot afford. But what does it mean for an IBO? I know my former upline taught our group to get out of debt. However, I believe my former uplines had self-serving intentions when they taught this. Let me translate what I believe they meant:
"You should not have any debt because it would affect your ability to buy more PV and tools. If you have debt, it affects my cashflow" This is if you read between the lines if what the diamond is saying, in my informed opinion.Ironically, for many, maybe most IBOs, although taught to get "get out of debt", the bottom-line result is more debt. There is more debt because the cost of products and tools begin to mount. How many families actually spend $300 a month (approximate cost of 100 PV) on household products? And then to add onto that expense, IBOs who are trying to be "successful" need tools which cost anywhere from $150 a month up to more than $500 a month depending on whether the IBO is married, single and the level of commitment. Thus, IBOs are now spending at least several hundreds of dollars or more that they never spent before.
Most IBOs, especially new IBOs, generally earn less than $50 a month. In fact, $50 a month income in this business would make you quite exceptional. Most IBOs earn less than $20 a month. With that kind of income and with the expenses I listed above (tools = voicemail, books, standing orders, and functions), nearly all "serious" IBOs operate in the red and never turn a profit. The only way an IBO can turn a profit is to sell Amway products like crazy (which I have never witnessed) or to sponsor enough downline to absorb the losses for them. The only true success stories are the ones who sell the tools.
The reason why I believe that my former uplines (who are still in WWDB and apparently teach the same things now as they did back when I was an IBO) are teaching self-serving advice because although they said to "get out of debt", they made an exception to this and said it was perfectly okay to go in debt to attend functions or to buy more standing orders. IBOs were also told to do "whatever it takes" to get to the next function or to buy more tools. It is why I witnessed some crosslines go bankrupt, more than one couple lost their homes following upline advice. And these couples were told they shouldn't worry because they can pay cash for their homes when they go diamond. Another apparent lie told by WWDB leaders, especially those who had their own homes foreclosed.
Let's be perfectly real here. If you join Amway and participate in the system consisting of voicemail, books, standing orders and functions, you are far more likely to get into debt or increase your debt rather than making money and getting out of debt. The math bears it out if you are willing to look at it objectively.
1 comment:
The basic truth to understand is this: if you are an Amway IBO, what you spend monthly on voicemail, books, standing orders, meeting fees, and functions is purely wasted money. These expenses do nothing at all to help you "build your business," whether through retail sales or through recruitment of a down-line.
Your Amway AMO subsystem wants you "out of debt" in only one sense. They don't want you having any financial obligations that might prevent you from spending money on the Amway racket. But they have no problem at all with you going into deep debt to keep up your monthly payments on all the things mentioned above.
The core idea is this: Debt to others = BAD DEBT. Debt to Amway = GOOD DEBT.
It's hard to believe that there are so many stupid people who can't understand that the entire Amway scheme is designed to suck money from IBOs until they quit in desperation, or until they simply go broke.
Post a Comment