A diamond averages $23,000 in tool income. If that diamond travels with his family first class to a function, that alone can cost $10,000 a for week.
I'm not aware of any diamonds that regularly travel with their families first class to multiple functions a month.
Howe many functions does a diamond attend?
Depends on the nature and extent of their business I suppose, as well as whether they're expanding. Those in demand on the speaking circuit, and who choose to avail themselves of it, would also obviously be more than others. I haven't seen my upline Diamond at an event I've attended for more than 10 years, and I've attended plenty of major seminars in that time (mostly for pleasure, not profit)
Your former pal "Brad" mentioned that his diamond was pulling in 20,000 a month on voicemail royalties.
Again, link?
It's not hard to figure. You make 10 bucks for each subscription for example, and you have 2000 active downline. Voila.
According to the Quixtar data presented in Team vs Quixtar, the average qualifying Diamond
and above had 4624 IBOs in their group. According to statistics provided by WWDB and Network 21, less than 20% of IBOs utilise support systems, even fewer would be on voicemail (we don't even have it in my market). So, Diamonds
and above (that's everything up to Founders Crown Ambassado 70, which is at a minimum 20 times the size of a Diamond business), would average less than 1000 IBOs on voicemail at all.
So the average vanilla Diamond has a lot less than 1000 IBOs on voicemail. Probably less than 500.
As for profiting $10/mth per subscriber? Where'd you get that figure from? When I had voicemail I wasn't even paying that much per month for the service. So you subtract the cost of the service provider, plus all the staffing and management expenses of Network 21, then the profit sharing with platinums and emeralds .... not that much left in profit per month to share with the Diamonds.
You mean like a diamond telling people to buy them at a function that the IBOs paid to attend?
Well let's see. I'll assume costs of recording a CD at a function were covered by function income, but then many CDs (for example from outside sources like John Maxwell or Ron Jensen or Allan Pease) are licenced.
So you have a licencing fee for them
You need someone to listen to all recordings and choose the best for duplications
You have to pay someone to check and edit the recording to ensure it doesn't violate any amway rules
You have to pay someone to edit in copyright and other notices (eg licence expiry dates)
You have to pay for creation of the master.
You have to pay for the design and production of packaging
You have to pay staff handling orders, subscriptions, returns, accounts payable and receivable
You have to pay staff attending functions (at weekend and/or night rates) to sell the CDs
You have to pay staff to ship orders
You have to pay executive/management staff who are responsible for all of this (Network 21 has several hundred employees and offices in a couple of dozen countries)
You have to subtract payment processing charges (eg Visa fees)
You have to subtract taxes
You have to pay an accountant to keep track of all this stuff
You have to pay for office space and all associated office expenses (phones, electricity, equipment, consultants etc etc)
You have to pay for design, hosting, and maintenance of websites that sell all this stuff
You need to maintain funds for R&D and investment in growth, eg new market openings
And not to mention the folk who promote the stuff need compensating. Yes, those platinums and above make money on sale of CDs! How much?
In the case of Network 21, $2.20 of the $7 CD is distributed to the platinums, emeralds, diamonds etc who promote (and in some cases, distribute) the stuff. A Diamonds cut of the profit would usually be 20 to 40 cents. By contrast, of a $7 product sold by Amway, $4.55 is distributed to the IBOs marketing it.
Get that?
Percent profit shared with IBOs from sale of CD - 31%
Percent profit shared with IBOs from sale of Amway product - 65%
And the average active IBO generates much more sales of Amway products than they do of "tools". Yet you'd have us believe more is made from selling CDs?
You said to do the math. There it is.
Apologies. You see, Icerat lives in Amway Utopia where everyone makes money, everyone achieves diamond and nobody uses less than honest techniques to recruit downline. If you believe that, I am selling shares of the Brooklyn bridge.
Yup, if you believe that's what I claim, then you would indeed believe joecool has a bridge to sell.
Joecool lives in a business utopia where there are no expenses apart from duplication of a mastered product.
