Thursday, December 4, 2025

The Quota?

  Most LOS groups that I know of, use 100 PV as the benchmark when promoting the Amway business. Many groups also teach that you simply "change" your shopping habits and you can easily reach 100 PV. This teaching creates an artificial demand for Amway products and I believe that Amway sales would take a huge dip if not for this teaching. I also am of the opinion that for this reason, Amway had/has done little to reign in LOS abuses of downline.

100 PV is roughly equal to about $250 to $300 worth of products. Of course, your cost may vary, depending on whether you purchase a lot of CORE Amway products such as laundry detergent, and nutrilite vitamins. For many people, the 100 PV benchmark is seen as the minimum for a business building IBO. The problem for many is that Amway products are not competitively priced, thus it is a hard sell. If I can buy the same or a similar product elsewhere for a fraction of the price, I will. And most consumers feel the same way.

It is why some LOS groups adopted the "buy from yourself and get others to do the same" philosophy. Since most people do not like selling, and because of the high prices of Amway products, simply telling prospects to buy from yourself made the concept palatable. The problem with buy from yourself is that it reaches the borders of being illegal, in my opinion. That is because in a buy from yourself environment, the only way for an IBO to make a profit, is to recruit downline to benefit from the volume rebates. That is because there is no outside customers to bring in cash from outside the circle of IBOs.

What makes this issue even worse is when you have LOS groups such as WWDB creating an even greater problem with programs such as eagle. If 100 PV is an inflated demand for Amway products, incentive programs such as eagle make it worse. How can a single person reasonably be expected to move 200 to 300 PV when most of it is personal consumption? The upline leaders use these programs as an incentive for downline IBOs, but in turn, they benefit financially by having more downline volume, as well as potentially enhanced tools sales by dedicated downline IBOs.

I challenge any IBO or prospect to take a close look at your Amway purchases. Are you truly just changing your shopping habits and achieving 100 PV or are you buying things to give away, or buying things that accumulate somewhere? Unless IBOs are selling half of their purchases, they are probably overbuying Amway products. I believe it is simply because of upline teaching which creates a defacto 100 PV quota and an artificial demand for Amway products. I challenge you to examine this closely and make your own conclusions.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

The required 100 PV purchases every month are what kill most IBOs in Amway. That's about $300 of stuff that you really don't need, and that you can't sell to anyone.

Making something a "required purchase" is by its very nature tyrannical and oppressive. Why should I be "forced" to buy what I don't want or can't use?

Does the Coca-Cola company force you to buy a certain amount of Coke every month? Does any genuine retail outfit do that?

Joecool said...

The fallacy is that you support your own Amway business. Or that a McDonal's owner would not eat at Burger King. Not true. It's a fool's game to believe that a McDonald's owner would only eat at his own restaurant every day to support his own business. Do you see Amway diamonds only wearing Amway catalog suits at functions?

Anonymous said...

There's another point to be raised. Why do Amway IBOs have basements and garages and closets filled with Amway products that they had to buy to meet their monthly PV requirements? Why were they forced to buy Amway products that THEY DIDN"T REALLY WANT, AND THAT THEY WILL NEVER USE?

It's not that you might want to try a different product once in a while. It's that cultic loyalty to Amway forces you to purchase stuff you don't actually want.

Amway is supposed to mean "the American Way." But forcing people to buy only a certain approved brand of product is totally un-American.