Saturday, August 10, 2024

Build It In Your Spare Time?

 One of the myths that our upline used to, and likely still perpetuate is the silly claim that you can build an Amway mega empire on 8-12 hours per week.  The speaker would say you you can build an Amway empire in you "spare time".  This IMO is the hook that gets people interested.  I'm venturing an educated guess that this number is used because while it still represents time, it is probably less hours than working a part time job. But let's take a closer look at this 8-12 hours per week.

If you listen to one (1) cd/audio per day as recommended by upline and read one of their "success" books 15 minutes each day, you already close to nine hours of time used and neither of these activities produces any income for your Amway business. In fact, both activities cost you money and produce no tangible result and no income. If you spend another 15 minutes a day contacting people, you are close to 12 hours per week. Where will you find additional time to show the plan and to expand your name and contact list? What about servicing customers, at least for IBOs who actually may have some customers. If you spend 8-12 hours of non income producing activities, how will that turn into financial freedom? The answer is simple. It doesn't. That activity primarily benefits your upline diamond who profits from selling you cds/audios or function tickets, or voicemail.

What about attending meetings and functions? These are also non income producing activities. It's no wonder the vast majority of IBOs don't make money. Their upline has them running around participating in activities that produce no income for their businesses. Ironically, there non income producing activities such as listening to a cd, produces a lot of income for certain uplines who produce and sell them. To me, it is just an elaborate game of bait and switch played by upline. Attending functions and meetings are promoted as learning activities but again, how does it benefit an IBO to spend money instead of making money?

You sell the prospect the dream of financial freedom. You tell the audience that that Amway is their best chance. You tell them that you can help them and that the tools of the business (standing order, voicemail, books, functions) are the key to their success. Those who are serious enough to commit to the system likely won't quit without making some effort and will allow uplines to earn some nice profits before these downline eventually realize they aren't profitable and quit. Because many IBOs are sponsored by family and friends, you don't see many formal complaints about the business. Most people chalk it up as a life lesson and do not complain or file complaints.

But IBOs and information seekers, do not be fooled into thinking that you will create a financial empire by working 8-12 hours a week in your spare time.  Look at your return on investment and/or your profits and losses at the end of the month. What you will see is a consistent net loss because of the system and no profit, also because of the system.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

There's no way that Amway can be seen as a "spare time" thing, or as something you can do "part time" while holding down a regular 9 to 5 job. Whoever spreads that kind of bullshit to potential recruits is a liar.

Even Amway admits that the only income-producing activity in the racket is SELLING AMWAY PRODUCTS, just like any other retail business. You can sell them to your friends, your family, and your neighbors -- but that is a limited market and you can't expect them to keep coming back to you for more. You can buy some Amway products for your personal use, but that isn't income-producing.

The only way to make money in Amway is to sell the products to repeat retail customers in the general public. That means having a wide and stable customer base that wants the products, and that will buy them regularly.

Does that sound funny? Sure it does -- because nobody in any of the AMO subsystems (WWDB, BWW, Network 21, TEAM, etc.) will tell you the above truth. In fact, all of them pay little attention to selling, and urge you to put all your energy into the recruitment of new IBOs underneath you.

This is why Amway is actually a pyramid scheme, but one artfully disguised by the transfer of products down the line from IBO to IBO. The Amway Company tries to deny this, or else pretends that this kind of abuse is done by the independent AMOs, and therefore is none of their legal responsibility.

In either case, it makes no difference to the lowly IBO, who will be ripped off.