One of the things that is clear. Many Amway recruits are shown fancy cars and toys, along with luxurious vacations and trappings. This is a way to get prospects excited and interested in signing up for the Amway opportunity. Many sign up, and soon enough, the excitement fades and they quit. Either that or the IBO sees monthly losses and no prospects of improvement and quits. Many do little or nothing. But what many people do no understand or realize is that there is a reason for this. Many do little or nothing, I suspect because the business is much harder to build than advertised.
Because Amway has a stigma in the US (and growing in other locations), finding prospects is a daunting task. Add in the high prices of Amway products and you have major challenges that IBOs simply cannot overcome. Most simply quit and fade away into society. Some, like myself were lied to and abused, with upline leaders (WWDB)who were never held accountable for their actions. Thus I blog so others may share my experiences and can decide if they wish to climb insurmountable challenges for a less than 1% chance of financial success.What many leaders do is evolve their teachings. They start to teach their IBOs that the Amway opportunity may have made them nicer people, better fathers or husbands and other nice to hear stories because it covers up the fact that these IBOs are not making money. Sometimes I wonder how someone can be a better person by deceiving others about the business opportunity, or how you can be a better father or husband when Amway meetings become a priority over your family and friends. Or how you can be a nicer person and leave threatening messages on forums with those who disagree about Amway being a great business opportunity?
Rather that justifying your involvement or looking are side benefits, IBOs should be looking at their bottom line. If your Amway "Business" is not generating enough money to pay for your voicemail and other expenses and leaving you with a net profit, then what exactly is your upline teaching you that is worth the ongoing expense? If you are like most, you are told that Amway has no overhead and has little risk. Well, that becomes untrue after months pass by and you have spent hundreds if not thousands on support materials that do not deliver you a net profit. Additionally, your upline is making a nice income by selling you those support materials and advising you to buy more.
Are you new or a tenured IBO? Has your teaching from upline evolved away from making money as the bottom line? If so, what do you do next? I would run in the opposite direction.
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Because the vast majority of Amway IBOs do not break even, their up-line supervisors MUST invent excuses and explanations that cover up this failure.
The most common is the charge that "you did not work hard enough." This is distinctly stupid when you say it to an IBO who has been "Core" for two years and is still losing money. The idea that everyone who works hard in Amway will make money is blatantly idiotic. Thousands have worked hard (and spent thousands of dollars in the racket) and were financially ruined by Amway.
Another charge is that "you did not buy enough tools and teaching materials." This too is absurd -- dedicated Amway IBOs have bought endless books and CDs and tapes, and have listened to nothing but noisy rah-rah-let's-go-team speeches on them. Those tools teach you nothing but how to be a hyped-up asshole.
But the worst and most asinine excuse that your up-line will come up with is the notion that "Amway makes you a better person," or that "Amway allows you to help others," or that "Amway is a God-pleasing business" or that "Amway teaches you leadership skills." I don't know how up-line can repeat this lying bullshit to IBOs and keep a straight face. Tell me ANY OTHER BUSINESS IN THE ENTIRE WORLD where you can spout this kind of baloney to a worker in place of giving him a paycheck.
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