We’ve touched on Amway’s diet plan a few times in the past,
mostly to poke fun at the speakers on the stage who are walking advertisements
Trim does not work so I thought I’d take a closer look at it.
Ambot’s sponsor Captain Fuck Up claimed to be on Trim and was losing weight so
Ambot decided to try it. Or more accurately, buy it not try it. I found this
Amway Trim Advantage binder way up high in the cupboard behind where I store
spare cookie tins. I doubt Ambot ever opened it. It has several sections in there
- Meal Plans, Recipes, Exercises. At the back is a CD. Like we need another
fucking Amway CD! Its called the Trim Advantage Body System. Never opened. Can
we get a refund?
There’s an introduction letter at the front of the binder’s contents and then a
commitment to optimal health “contract” that the IBO is supposed to sign. And
here I say IBO because its unlikely that a person who was not an IBO would
spend the hundreds of dollars needed to get going on the Trim Advantage diet
plan. Cheaper to sign up with just about any other diet plan and get personal
support. What do you do with the contract after you sign it. Give it to your
upline Platinum so he can mock you in board plan meetings if you’re not losing
weight?
Right behind the commitment contract is a page titled “Plan Ahead” with the
Amway products you need to stock up on. Nutrilite Vitamins:
CLA 500 - $79.95
ProDigest - I can’t find it on Amway’s web site so I don’t know if the
name changed or if the product was discontinued - last known cost $60.44
Chromemate - As above, can’t find it - last known cost $44
Digestive Enzyme Complex - $46.90
Below that a paragraph that says “Keep Your Commitment - Stock Up on
Favorites”:
Trim advantage Protein Bars
Chocolate Delight - $24.99
Mixed Berry Smoothie - $20.97
Nutrilite Protein Powder - $30.75
I looked on Amway’s website to find this binder thing that we have in the house
and the big thing I discovered was that Amway has changed the name from Trim.
The diet plan is now called Nutrilite Weight Management Program. I found their
Better Balancer Program kit which I believe may be similar to what Ambot
purchased a few years ago. It costs $236.78. I seem to recall Ambot paid over
$200 for the system and in addition to this binder full of “important” information
it included a box of food bars and meal replacement powdered drink.
Amway also has a kit called the Fat Trimmer Plan - $265.88
So just to get started buying all of the above and I’ll go with the Better
Balancer not the Fat Trimmer price. $544.78. Wow!
Now lets go to the meal plan in the binder. The first few pages talk about
dieting stuff that you can find for free in the library or on the Internet such
as drink water, serve meals on smaller plates, choose low fat products when
grocery shopping, etc.
Let’s look at Day 1 meal plan:
Breakfast: Trim Body System Berry Vanilla Shake. I won’t give the whole recipe
but the Amway product needed to make it is Nutrilite Protein Powder ($30.75)
which may have already been purchased if you followed the above rules and
stocked up.
Snack: 1 bag Trim Advantage Crunch Zone Snack Chips. Can’t find it on their web
page but if I recall correctly it came in a box and had 2 different flavors and
cost around $60 and this was for like 10 bags of chips in each flavor. At this
snack time you also get a cup of vegetable juice. Horror of horrors. You need
to go to the grocery store for that one because they’re not slinging an Amway
product.
Lunch: Apple and cheddar salad. There’s a recipe. No Amway products. Sucks to
have to go to the grocery store again!
Snack - Trim Advantage Meal Replacement Bar - $26.39 for a box.
Dinner - Beef Stir Fry - there’s a recipe, no Amway products. 2/3 cup Uncle
Ben’s instant whole grain brown rice, 1 cup skim milk.
That’s over $100 of Amway products to have on hand just for Day 1. I won’t bore
you with the rest of the week. Does anyone wonder if Uncle Ben is getting a
kick back from Uncle Dickie?
Does anyone else see a problem here besides the cost? What about 5 to 10 fruits
and vegetables a day? Let’s throw that out the window, though there is about 3
servings in their recipes for lunch and dinner. Oh wait. What the hell do you
need to eat fruit and vegetables for? Amway has a vitamin for that. $40.99.
Obviously this is a ploy by Amway to sell more overpriced products to IBO’s who
feel they need to lose weight.
Amway is hardly the only company out there to flog a diet system using their
products.
A friend of mine used to work for Jenny Craig. As far as I know Carla was never
overweight. I got the scoop from her about working as a Jenny Craig counsellor
even though she has no training in weight loss, nutrition, counselling, etc.
She was paid a salary or hourly wage I don’t recall which but she also got a
commission from all the Jenny Craig food products she sold. And decent
commission. Worked out higher than her salary. Just luck of the draw if she
happened to be working when a Jenny Craig customer walked in and needed to buy
the next week’s meals. I don’t know what the meals cost but seeing as how there
is enough mark up for staff to get a decent commission I’d say they’re on the
high priced side. Amway does not sell frozen entrees so Jenny Craig gets a leg
up on them there. Jenny Craig charges for its services. I’m not sure if its by
the pound or by the month or the year but its probably semi expensive, say a
couple of hundred dollars to reach your weight goal not including food - but
I’m not sure. Just ballparking.
I also remember reading the Special K diet plan directed to their website from
a cereal box. A ploy by Kellogg’s to sell their cereal products but probably
relatively low priced compared to other diet plans. A box of Special K cereal
is about $4 and I think the diet plan had a different flavor each day of the
week. Even if someone went out and bought all 6 or 7 flavors of Special K to
stock up that would still be under $30 enough to cover many breakfasts.
The other meals were salads or various recipes that the dieter would prepare
themselves. Snacks usually were Special K bars. Yes I’ve eaten their bars and
like them. They cost about $2 a box and there are 5 or 6 bars in the box.
Relatively low priced. I would say a person could stock up on one of every
flavor of Special K cereal and cereal bars and the bill would be under $50 and
probably last the dieter a month. No fee to use their diet plan. Save money and
eat healthier and choose Special K over Amway!
There’s a website called SparkPeople that helps people losing weight. Menu plans, exercise plans,
articles, discussion forums. All free to use. They’re not flogging vitamins,
food bars, CD’s, or anything else.
There are lots of diet programs out there ranging from fees to use the program
to purchasing the program’s meals and supplements. It looks like Amway’s plan
is the most expensive for what you get. It offers no support, no individual
counselling (ha ha counsel with upline!), no discussion forums, nothing. Just
pay your money, buy the overpriced shit, and hope for the best.
The secret to losing weight is no more complicated than eating less and
exercising more. Cutting out products high in fat and substituting healthier
options and eating more fresh fruit and vegetables. Drink several glasses of
water daily and drinking green tea in the evening is supposed to help with
weight loss.
All of this can be accomplished while leaving those shitty Amway products back
in their warehouse.
In case anyone is wondering Captain Fuck Up put the weight back on.
This Amway Diet Plan is obviously aimed at "Core" IBOs, who have fanatical loyalty to the Amway brand-name. They'd buy horse manure if it was labeled as an Amway product.
ReplyDeleteNo one could sell this Diet Plan in the normal retail market, since it is too expensive and there are dozens of better options available for persons who want to lose weight. But Amway knows that once you have an IBO hooked, you can persuade him to buy almost anything that his up-line tells him is good for him.
So what did Amway do? Simple: they took some vitamin pills, some protein and energy bars, some powders and drinks and snacks, and a few available recipes, and put it all into fancy packaging. Then they told the Platinums to sing its praises, and get down-line to buy it.
They sure as hell weren't going to get anybody outside of Amway to buy it.
Anonymous - you're right. The only dumb asses buying Amway's diet program are CORE Ambots.
DeleteThe rest of the world can find cheaper options like searching on the Internet for diet plans and menus and shopping for those groceries at normal stores. These people usually have good willpower and can go it alone without a support system. Which is the same as Amway's expensive weight loss program - you go it alone without a support system.
Other people go to Weight Watchers meetings and they pay as they go and get weighed at meetings. That support system works better for them.
People who need to lose a good deal of weight and keep it off have to change their eating habits. Throw out and don't use anything that doesn't help their goals and keep it out.
It's kind of like how Amway doesn't work so you just got to throw that Amway shit out and keep everything Amway out of your life.