There’s another saying that I
don’t recall hearing at any Amway meeting and it has to do with not putting all
of your eggs in one basket.
Actually the only time I remember that phrase being used was by our arrogant
prick sponsor who said when he’s recruiting prospects that he starts putting
fear into people about their job and how he hopes they don’t have all their
eggs in one basket because they’ll be finished.
Well what else do you expect from a rotten little bastard like him?
Diversify! A word that shall never be spoken at an Amway meeting because the
activities involved in diversifying take away time and dollars from the cult
leaders efforts to earn an income doing the Amway thing. Instead the opposite
is taught: put all your eggs in one basket. The one that belongs to the Amway hen
house!
Basically diversifying means investing in a variety of assets and spreading the
risk around in case one venture fails there are other assets on the go
that might turn out better. Before diversifying its a good idea to figure
out your own risk tolerance and how much money you can afford to lose should
things not work out so good.
For example in Amway, be
prepared to “invest” at least $10,000 a year on Amway products, attending
functions, and buying tools. If you’ve got a better use for that $10,000, I
recommend that’s the road you take!
Say someone has $150 kicking around in a savings account and an IBO is trying
to get them to “invest” in their own business as an Amway IBO. The person doesn’t
want to risk all their $150 in Amway and in this case is probably ignorant of
the hundreds of dollars on top of that to buy Amway products and attend Amway
functions because you don’t find that out until after you’ve been sucked into
the lies. On the other hand that $150 is only getting half a percent interest
in the savings account. But that person might be comfortable risking $100 of
that $150 into 100 shares of a stock that’s currently selling for $1 a share.
The worst thing that can happen is the stock takes a nosedive and they lose
their $100 but not all is lost because they still have $50 sitting in the bank’s
savings account. Or the stock might take off and at the end of the year is
worth $25 a share.
When considering diversifying, a homeowner might decide to invest in a second
house using the equity in their main residence as a down payment and renting
out the other house - hopefully for a few bucks more than the mortgage. In
twenty years the mortgage will be paid off. At this point the owner has the
choice of continuing to rent the house and all the rental income is now profit
with some deductions for city taxes and general maintenance as the house gets
older and things like the roof and hot water tank need to be replaced. It now
becomes residual income, more than most IBO’s will ever see! Or else the house
can be sold and the equity is profit to the owner.
Some people who are incredibly talented and lucky make a living playing poker
or gambling, investing in the stock market, or flipping houses.
Whatever they’re doing they’ve found a way to diversify. Words that never
should be spoken at an Amway meeting! Probably because when people are looking
at their investments and figuring out which ones they should cut loose, they
start with whatever one is losing money.
Here’s a laugh. Our arrogant prick sponsor told us he’s always looking for ways
to diversify his income, talking about investments. This son of a bitch who’s
always behind on his bills, is a renter always under the threat of eviction,
drives old beater cars, and never has any money. Diversify what income! What
disposable income does he have lying around? I think finding ways to
invest would be an impossibility for him. Its always nice to dream though.
Oh wait. That’s what Amway’s all about. Dreams!
I decided a long time ago that the great Amway dream is a bunch of bullshit. I
have better ways of making my money work for me.
I was an Amway Distributor for years, but it was impossible to recruit people in the Northeast, so just ended up spending lots of money on tapes and books that eventually ended up in a landfill. It was the all American dream that never materialized even though our upline were Diamonds and did all they could to help me build my business. However, I soon learned it was impossible and ended up just buying their products which I loved. This all began for me in the 1990's. Any and all products that started in Amway that were good have almost all been taken out of service and now them seem to be a makeup business. One amazing product was Industroclean. It was sold in 1 liter bottles and then someone decided to do away with that and made it only accessible in industrial size containers. Now it is no longer sold. It was an amazing degreaser product. The same with their bug spray D15, Septic Tank Aids, Trizyme, etc. All their good products are no longer available. I still buy the products, but I'm down to only a few and now I'm doing away with two of those. Their 2-in-1 shampoo was amazing, but they've reformulated it so that it now has some type of pine smell which I do not like. They reformulated their roll on deodorant and I will cease and desist in using that after using it for 30 years, because the roller ball is too small and the edges of the bottle scratch your underarms and the ball gets stuck more often than not and it too now has a pine scent. The only products I will now be using is their powdered laundry detergent, spot remover and LOC. So glad the company finally allowed people to become customers without having the pay a yearly $50 fee. They used to have the best products, but they have been dwindling under the new regime for years. It ain't what it used to be!!!
ReplyDeleteHi Anonymous. Thanks for stopping by to share your story! You are one of those rare people who actually liked some Amway products enough to keep buying them when they left the scam. But the same story as many former IBOs whose Amway products and tapes ended in a landfill. Can’t say I ever heard of the products you mentioned but the deodorant story made me laugh. Amway is known for selling substandard products for overinflated prices.
DeleteWhat this guy says proves a major point that we at this website have been repeating for years.
ReplyDeleteLook at what happened. Amway had some good products that were probably liked by plenty of people besides this one guy. And what did they do? They dumped the products or debased them so that they were cheaper and less effective.
It proves this: The Amway racket IS NOT ABOUT THE PRODUCTS!!! The products don't matter in the slightest! All that matters is that something is exchanged between up-line and down-line to cover up the fact that this Amway racket is nothing but a disguised pyramid scheme!
Amway doesn't give a shit if its products are bad. Because the business is about recruiting schmucks, not about selling products to the public.
Anonymous- Amway is all about sell the hope not the soap. And as you pointed out exactly what those products are does not matter. As long as they cult leaders at the top of the pyramid make big bucks that’s the only thing that matters to them.
DeleteI can’t imagine that somebody that used to be in ScAmway actually liked products enough to keep keep buying them afterwards.
On another note - this happens to me a lot. Just when I find a product that I really like and want to keep buying or maybe I’ve already been buying it for years - it is discontinued. Sucks!
Anna, this happens because big companies hire stupid Millennials and Gen Z types right out of college to be in middle management.. These young assholes have been propagandized to think that
Deletenothing old and established is any good, and has to be replaced on principle.
Look at the Bud Lite fiasco. Some dumb Millennial bitch in middle management comes up with an idea that alienates a huge percentage of Budweiser's customer base, and practically brings the company to bankruptcy. And what's her excuse? "Well, I had to redefine our customer profile to match the upcoming generation of beer drinkers!"
This is what happens when a company hires brain-dead Millennials and Gen Z types.
Anonymous - I’d day that’s about right. Brain dead Millennials and Gen Z who want to get paid big bucks for doing as little as possible except cause problems. Hmmm kind of like the target audience for Amway prospects.
Delete