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Kathy Hamilton

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Network Marketers are Pre-programmed
9/8/2006 1:36:35 AM
Why 90% of Network Marketers are Pre-programmed to FAIL There’s a live bomb planted in most network marketing businesses. The good news is, we know where it is and what it looks like. Even better, we know how to tell if there’s one in your business – and how to defuse it before it goes off. To learn if a bomb is planted in your network marketing business – and who planted it there – ask yourself this simple question: “Do I know everything I need to know in order to survive and prosper in my own network marketing business?” If your answer is either: 1. “I know all the answers”, or 2. “I don’t have any problems” (or something similar – or both!) it’s almost 100% certain that your business is at risk of being destroyed when the bomb you’ve planted goes off. (And it will… count on it!) What is this time bomb? Ignorance. We simply don’t know what we need to know to survive and prosper! We’re so busy working IN our businesses (as terrific employees) that we don’t realise – or, worse still, ignore – the need to work ON our businesses (as managers). What does that mean? Imagine a truck driver who decides to go into business for himself. He’s one of the best. His knowledge and skills are unsurpassed. He knows the routes, the danger spots, and he knows how to load and unload a truck faster than anyone else in the business. How long do you think he’ll stay in business, no matter how skilled he is, if he puts no fuel in the tank, no oil in the motor, no water in the radiator and no air in the tyres? Or if he doesn’t bother to register his rig? Or insure it? Or maintain it? Your business is like his truck It’s a vehicle that needs careful attention and regular servicing if it’s going to stay on the road. You ignore it at your peril. (And you get what you deserve.) No matter how good a prospector you are, or how good a sales person, if you don’t give your business the time and attention it needs, it will grind to a screeching halt, sooner or later. The problem’s very simple. So is the solution. If that’s the case, why do 90% of network marketers still fail? Because their fierce “independence” and personal pride won’t allow them to admit that they could possibly not know something about their businesses that they need to know in order to survive. The fact is, businesses don’t fail. People do. In other words, irrational emotion gets in the way of their ability to make sound, rational judgements about their businesses. They don’t want anyone else to think they’re not fully in control. Cause and effect Interestingly, the problem is generally worse among men than among women. Yet we tend to think of women as being more emotional than men. My own observation is that women tend to be emotional about things that really matter, especially in business. Like relationships (which is what betwork marketing is really about). On the other hand, men tend to be more emotional about things that don’t really matter… like titles, status symbols (cars, clothes, accessories, trophies), power, authority and money. And sport. (Not surprisingly, business is the ultimate game for many men.) It’s no coincidence that the survival rate of women in this business is significantly higher than the survival rate of men. The fact is, women tend to focus on the causes in life, while men tend to focus on the effects. Who’s to blame? It’s very much part of our culture that men are supposed to know everything about business, cars, sport and other “masculine” pursuits. If they don’t know – or, more to the point, if they’re foolish enough to admit that they don’t know – it’s seen as a serious deficiency on their part. Their manhood is somehow deemed to be in question. This kind of self-defeating, “macho” emotional conditioning has had a devastating impact on almost every facet of our society, especially our family relationships, and it’s time we put things right. Look at the FACTS… The Japanese business phenomenon has been built on some fundamental principles: • “There are no mistakes, only lessons to be learned.” • “Fix the problem, not the blame.” • “United we stand, divided we fall.” These are the opposite of the typical approach to small business in western society. • Most of us refuse to admit that we need to learn anything, so we go on making the same mistakes, over and over. The lessons remain unlearned. • Most of us are preoccupied with blaming someone (anyone!) else for our own mistakes, so the problems aren’t even acknowledged, let alone fixed. • Most of us want to be wholly self-sufficient (a myth). We don’t want to admit that we might need other people in order to survive. Network marketers are small business owners, regardless of their company affiliations. They’re independent operators. And they display all the same qualities and frailties as small business owners. And the same failure rate! Two important studies of Australian small business have identified not only our dismal survival rate, but why it remains so disastrously low. 1. The Williams Report Professor Alan Williams, former Professor of Management at the University of Newcastle in New South Wales, conducted an in-depth study of 10,000 small business over ten years. (It was actually 30,000 business over 14 years, but 20,000 of them went out of business before he completed the project.) He discovered a direct link between the survival rates of Australian small businesses and the number of training programs completed by owner-managers. This chart illustrates that connection. There are three basic conclusions from Professor Williams’ ground-breaking research: • Only 10-12% of Australian small businesses survive the first ten years in business. (By the way, this is one of the few definitive conclusions on this issue. Most others are drawn from purely statistical sources that don’t accurately reflect reality.) • Three, four or more training programs completed by an owner-manager result in a survival rate of around 90%. • The training itself has no relevance to the result. The real cause of this result is the owners’ attitudes to training! In other words, if the survivors don’t know what they need to know, they go out and get the training they need to make sure they survive. They’re not too “independent” (in reality, emotionally dependent on the opinions of others!) to admit that they have a problem and that they don’t know the answer! 2. The Bailey Report This report, commissioned by the New South Wales Government, found that: • 70% of small business people have a defensively negative attitude toward training. That is, they don’t like the idea that someone might think they’re lacking in know-how. • 10% of small business people have an aggressively negative (hostile!) attitude to training. You can’t even talk to them about it. • Only 20% have a positive attitude toward training. • Only half of these actually do anything about it! (That’s just 10% of the total who go out and get the training they need.) Can you see a connection between the conclusions of these two reports? 1. Survival rates are linked directly to the number of training programs completed. 2. Only about 10% of owner-managers get the training they need to succeed. 3. Only around 10% of small businesses survive the first ten years. Attitude is everything! The conclusion is inescapable. If you want to ensure your survival and prosperity (quantity and quality) in network marketing, you need to overcome any emotional dependence on pride and “independence” (a real Barker’s Egg) and admit you don’t know everything you need to know about working ON your business. This has nothing whatever to do with how good you are at what you do while working IN your business. It’s time to recognise the difference. Now… how’s your attitude to training?
I walk by faith not by sight Profit Clicking http://www.profitclicking.com/?r=simikathy
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Robert Talmadge

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Re: Network Marketers are Pre-programmed
9/8/2006 8:10:04 AM
Thank you for this article, Kathy.

Over the last year, I have seen a definite pattern in referral marketing.
of all of my people, only 5 percent will work the business, get and read
the training and put it to use. of that 5 out of 100, two of them will
become discouraged that it is taking too long and quit and go to
some other business. This leaves 3 out of 100 that will stay with
me, providing I am delivering on my promise to help them every
step of the way.

Perception is on the internet that if first you don't succeed, try another
business. If Col Sauders did that, there would have never been
a Kentuky Fried Chicken resteraunt. In fact it took the Col. several
years and 3000 failures before he got a "yes". The rest is history.

A red haired clown that sells fast food is another example. How do
you take a bunch of high school kids and make a franchise that is
worth millions? Examine the business plan of McDonnalds, and you
will see a system that is 100 percent duplicatable.

But if you have the business correct, and you identify your own personal
shortcomings, then you have something to work on.

Find an honest business opportunity with a 100 percent duplicatable
plan. If it is not working, then find out what you are doing wrong.
Follow the plan, if it works for more than 5 percent of the people
you have a winner.

Admitting that you don't have all the answers is the first step in
success.

Robert

Robert Talmadge To follow your dream, follow your heart. http://community.adlandpro.com/forums/17474/ShowForum.aspx
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Rudy Hiebert(rudyhiebert.myamsoil.c

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Re: Network Marketers are Pre-programmed
9/8/2006 11:13:47 AM
Another keeper, Kathy. The way I see "training" and how it applies to what I do
it's understanding and working with the prospects attitudes about the topic. Does this statement show that I'm pre-programed or trained? If training is another way of say, "pre-programed" then perhaps what remains is integrity. Integrity of the product and/or the individual. I've been told by a person who doesn't know squat about me or the products, that "the reason people don't like Amsoil is because they're too pushy".  That critisism could apply to  any one here because we know what we say about the product is true; admittedly we're human and get excited to the point of wanting others to experience its benefits.   
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