There are a lot of home based business ideas out there that
appeal to people who want to stay at home and earn an income other than going
into a bricks and mortar shop or office. Working from home is one of the lines
that IBO’s use when hunting down prospects. Its one of those phrases that get
people thinking that sounds like a good idea. Working from home means you can
often set your own hours, be at home with your kids, and get your housework and
cooking done. If you don’t have a car to commute to work or there are no nearby
job opportunities finding or creating a job where you can work from home is
ideal. Not to mention the thousands of dollars you’d be making each month on
your Amway business. Or so the lying scamming Amway ambot that did the
recruiting claims.
One of the things that people have to watch out for when searching for working
at home is scams. The type of scams that most people seem familiar with are the
ones for data entry, stuffing envelopes, or assembling products at home. Those
scams have been around long before the Internet when scammers posted ads in the
classified section of newspapers looking for unsuspecting victims.
When people think about work from home scams they’re not putting MLM’s into the
same category as a work from home scam to watch out for. MLM’s don’t have their
distributors working out of an actual building headquarters. They work out of
their houses or cars.
There was a link to the BBB work at home scams but it’s dead now. Too bad for
that. http://www.bbb.org/us/article/work-at-home-schemes-408
Anyway I happened to copy and post a quote from the article when this post
first appeared on the blog:
To avoid falling for work-at-home scams, both on- and off-line, look for the
following warning signs:
· Overstated claims of product effectiveness;
· Exaggerated claims of potential earnings, profits, or part-time earnings;
· Claims of "inside" information;
· Requirements of money for instructions or products before telling you how the plan works;
· Claims of "no experience necessary."
I can pick all these warning signs apart on how they apply to Amway.
1. Overstated claims of product effectiveness. All the time! Perfect Water is
the cure all for everything that ails you. Take any Amway product. If you talk
to an ambot they will brag about how every single Amway product is better than
anything else on the marketplace. No point in arguing with those brainwashed
ambots.
2. Exaggerated claims of potential earnings. I think I’ve covered that quite
well in this blog about how our upline lied about how much money one can earn
in Amway. 100k in 6 months working part time 10 to 15 hours a week. I have lots
of readers who’ve left comments about the lies they were told about how much
can be earned in Amway against the reality of what they actually earned. There
are many former IBO’s who’ve taken to the Internet to expose that lie of how
much money one can expect to earn in Amway. We’ve got it. False income
expectations.
3. Claims of inside information. I guess that depends on what one considers
inside information. We’re not talking trading stocks here however IBOFB goes
around claiming to have all kinds of inside information to Amway. Just about
everyone at Platinum and above level tell us at Amway meetings how they have
information about this that and the other and how its highly confidential and
they’ll release it to the masses once Amway gives them the green light. Like
see how important I am with this top secret information from Amway that the
rest of you ambots don’t have. Like who gives a shit.
4. Requirements of money. Yup. You have to pay lots of money for Amway tools to
learn how the plan works only to find out there is no plan other than buying
lots of tools so your upline can get richer.
5. Claims of no experience necessary. Yup. We were told being an Amway IBO was
so easy anyone could do it. If we objected that we had no sales experience or
no interest in product sales we were told that didn’t matter we don’t have to
sell anything. Guess that is true. Ambots are expected to buy Amway products
but sales to outsiders was pretty much glossed over.
And yes the BBB does have MLM’s down as scams to watch out for. Here’s what
they say:
MULTI-LEVEL MARKETING: Typical Ad -- "Our products make it possible
for people like you to earn more than they ever have in their lives! Soon you
can let others earn money for you while you and your family relax and enjoy
your affluent lifestyle! No experience necessary."
Multi-level marketing, a direct sales system, is a well-established, legitimate
form of business. Many people have successfully sold the products of reputable
companies to their neighbors and co-workers. These people are independent
distributors who sell popular products and also recruit other distributors to
join them. On the other hand, illegitimate pyramid schemes can resemble these
legitimate direct sales systems. An obvious difference is that the emphasis is
on recruiting others to join the program, not on selling the product. For a
time, new recruits who make the investment to buy product samples keep money
coming into the system, but very few products are sold. Sooner or later the
people on the bottom are stuck with a saturated market, and they cannot make
money by selling products or recruiting. When the whole system collapses, only a
few people at the top have made money—and those at the bottom have lost their
investment.
Very true. Being an Amway IBO is all about recruiting other people to become
IBO’s and not selling Amway products. Amway’s own sales figures show less than
5% of their sales are to customers who are not Amway IBO’s so finding customers
to sell products to is a low priority. The main reason for being an Amway IBO
is to buy Amway products to self consume and find others to do the same. And
everybody must buy CD’s, books, attend all functions. Buy tools! Buy extra
tools! That’s what’s taught at Amway meetings.
At least with scams like envelope stuffing and data entry victims tend to lose
smaller amounts of money maybe $10 maybe $100.
With the Amway scam victims typically lose thousands of dollars. Depends on how
long they feed into the scam. Other Amway victims lose their houses, their
credit rating, and their families.
Stay away from evil Amway scammers! Scum of the earth!
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Comments are moderated but we publish just about everything. Even brainwashed ambots who show up here to accuse us of not trying hard enough and that we are lazy, quitters, negative, unchristian dreamstealers. Like we haven’t heard that Amspeak abuse from the assholes in our upline!
If your comment didn’t get published it could be one of these reasons:
1. Is it the weekend? We don’t moderate comments on weekends. Maybe not every day during the week either. Patience.
2. Racist/bigoted comments? Take that shit somewhere else.
3. Naming names? Public figures like politicians and actors and people known in Amway are probably OK – the owners, Diamonds with CDs or who speak at functions, people in Amway’s publicity department who write press releases and blogs. Its humiliating for people to admit their association with Amway so respect their privacy if they’re not out there telling everyone about the love of their life.
4. Gossip that serves no purpose. There are other places to dish about what Diamonds are having affairs or guessing why they’re getting divorced. If you absolutely must share that here – don’t name names. I get too many nosy ambots searching for this. Lets not help them find this shit.
5. Posting something creepy anonymously and we can’t track your location because you’re on a mobile device or using hide my ass or some other proxy. I attracted an obsessed fan and one of my blog administrators attracted a cyberstalker. Lets keep it safe for everyone. Anonymous is OK. Creepy anonymous and hiding – go fuck yourselves!
6. Posting something that serves no purpose other than to cause fighting.
7. Posting bullshit Amway propaganda. We might publish that comment to make fun of you. Otherwise take your agenda somewhere else. Not interested.
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9. We suspect you're a troublemaking Amway asshole.
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