Hi, Linda,
My favorite subject! At the end of your post you asked if we knew of an MLM that allows consumers to buy without joining. Every legitimate MLM allows consumer purchases--as I understand it, that's what separates the wheat from the chaff.
What I look for before committing:
-A product that I'm interested in using for myself or my family and that I think will have broad appeal.
-Upline and corporate responsiveness to my questions and the sense that the questions are being answered honestly without evasion.
-A system to follow for team building and marketing.
-NO front-loading of product! This lets out most direct-sales organizations for me, and I have two very good reasons for that: Tupperware and Weekenders. Love the products; hard businesses in which to make money. Please don't throw things at me if you represent these companies. I speak only from my own experience.
-A pay plan that I can understand, that the company can sustain, and that is fair to everyone--hardest of all to find!
The strongest advice I could give anyone who is just starting out in this business is to learn to analyze the pay plan. Don't take the company projections to heart. Organizations never fill in neatly like the projections show. If your pay depends on the balance being perfect, be prepared for frustration. If it depends on someone below you meeting a difficult qualification, be prepared to not be paid. If you aren't analytical, find someone who is to help you.
The trouble with MLM is that companies and unscrupulous or overly optimistic reps make it sound like there is no work involved. Nothing could be further from the truth.
On the other hand, if you are willing to work, I don't know of much else that you can start with so little money or time and become financially free in so short a time. No, not overnight. But within two to five years if you stick with it and work at it.
Cheri
PS. I thought chain letters are Ponzi schemes.
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