Independent Business Organization. That's what it's called. By definition, all of them are businesses.
Actually, the term in the US is Independent Business Owner.
Are you seriously claiming that Amway Corporation gets to define whether someone is running a business or not? Has the IRS agreed to this?
If they called it "Amway member" instead, then the model would be different?
I haven't shared my personal anecdotes because there's no need to. I think I've demonstrated that I know enough about them to discuss them rationally.
You've demonstrated ignorance of how the model works
The problem for Amway is that no one is "building a business" through sales of the products. The statistics prove this.
Utterly false. Again, where are the forty billions of dollars worth of products that Amway has sold in the last decades? Buried somewhere?
Yes. There is a lot of product being moved. However, the evidence indicates that the product is being moved by IBOs buying for their own consumption and recruiting others to do the same.
You're contradicting yourself. You're saying nobody is building the business through sale of products and then saying product is being moved (ie sold).
Is it being sold or not?
No need to argue it because it makes my point. You aren't running a business, you are buying things at a discount.
You contradict yourself again. Right at the beginning you insisted I'm running a business because Amway calls me an IBO.
Now if you want to claim that there are plenty of people who DO join it and 2-3 years later are raking in the money, you need to present evidence of this.
Already presented. Indeed the statistics you claim prove "failure" already do it. The brochure says over 309,000 North American members received a bonus last year. It also says 0.3% earned bonuses over $40,000/yr. We know from the statistics in the Team vs Quixtar lawsuit that half who register never even purchase products after doing so, so we know they don't earn a bonus. That means there's
more than 618,000 North American members.
So there's somewhere around 2000 Amway business owners in North America alone averaging over $40,000/yr in bonuses and commissions.
Here's more examples -
Achievers Magazine
Amway Wiki
Of course you need downline! Reaching Gold level or higher (which only 0.47% of all IBOs ever do) requires monthly sales volume of roughly $15,000. We all know (as you said "Since the vast majority of them have no expectation to make money and indeed don't even try") that virtually no one is selling that much in monthly volume by themselves.
I've already pointed out I know people who do this much in customer sales volume. A friend of mine in New York has over 2000 regular customers on his books.
You must recruit a downline to help you reach this. But most of the people you recruit will not even try to make money. So the realistic chances/odds of ever reaching Gold level are very minute.
The
networking statistics are that if you recruit 20 people, 8 will do pretty much nothing. 9 will be wholesale shoppers, maybe recruit a small number. 3 will treat it as a business and try to make some money, at least for a while. So even in the BFYTODS model, your customer:business builder ratio is 3:1. Throw in the fact that active and recruiting business builders will usually have at least 20 regular customers, and your now at a 60:1 customer:business builder ratio.
Sponsor 20 people and develop 20 personal customers and the statistics for those who reach Gold and higher are close to 100%
Which means that I don't really have a chance/opportunity of ever making any money with Amway. Therefore, Amway sucks as a business opportunity.
Statistics also indicate that if you expose the business plan and products to 100-200 people within a 3-6 month period, and operate in a professional manner, you'll sponsor 20 and develop 20 personal customers.
But the article you quoted said I had 35-1 odds of making a $50,000 salary if I recruited a productive downline.
Yes, just recruiting *one* productive downline.
I merely said that I have the same odds of winning that money on a $1500 bet to illustrate that the odds of that happening are pretty long by the logic of the article you quoted.
Hypothetically, since you're so focussed on odds -
Sponsor someone for $50. Buy $150 (at wholesale price) worth of products for your grandmother, register it as a customer sale. Have the person you sponsored buy $150 (at wholesale price) worth of products.
You've now qualified for a downline bonus, you're now in 1:35 odds. Pay for all that yourself and you've spent $350 and got $300 worth of products. Actually sell the products and you're $50 in the black and got equivalent odds to your vegas winnings.
I also implied that I don't really buy the premise of the article in the first place.
So point out the flaws.
But as I quoted you above, you said I would have 12 months to reconsider. This only says 3 months to get my business registration fee and training material expenditures back and 6 months on product. Where does it say I have 12 months? That's what I can't find.
Actually to be honest I'm not quite sure on the current rules, they're vary from country to country. I thought they had changed it to 12 months in the US. Either I'm wrong or the brochure is outdated. Either may be true.
Not as an IBO for stock that I purchased to sell. For that they charge me $5.95 per return. So I'm not getting a "full refund" if I decide the opportunity is not good for me.
Ok, that's new. I don't have to pay that here in Sweden, nor in Australia where I built my business originally. I've returned stuff in both countries and they even pay shipping.
This has not been my experience. YMMV.
So go and gather statistics.
If 8 million is the number registered then this means that only about 36000 worldwide (extrapolating the .46% in North America) have reached gold level or above. That means that 7,964,000 have been pitched a "business opportunity" and not made any money at it at all.
No, that doesn't mean that at all. First of all, I had a profitable Amway business *long* before reaching "gold level". But yes, most people "pitched" the idea won't make money. That's cause most people don't try. As the judge in the UK court case said - "it's an opportunity, not a guarantee".
But if it was a legitimate business opportunity, the success rate would be a hell of a lot higher.
(1) Why? Given the very lost of entry and low risk, you would expect a very large number of people to not treat it very seriously. Heck, it costs more to join the gym, but most people who join the gym stop shortly afterwards. That doesn't make exercise a poor way to get fit.
(2) You're arbitrarily defining "success" for other people. If someone joined Amway to make a few hundred dollars a month holding makeup parties, and does say, you're calling them a failure even though they reached their goals.
I don't think people sign up with Amway to fail. Even if half just signed up on a whim or just to please a friend or family member, that still leaves quite a few who may have wanted to make money but discovered that the business model was unsustainable.
Amway Japan statistics in their annual report a few years back said 75% joined primarily to get discounted distributor pricing. If they successfully place an order and get a product, they've reached their goal. You're calling them a failure and evidence of an unsustainable business model.
Is going to the gym and exercising a poor way of getting fit because most people who join the gym don't get fit?
I have to ask you: Why do you care so much if you don't have a stake in this? You have said that you are not actively involved in Amway so why so much effort in defending it?
A few years back I was spending a few months in Paris and got bored and ended up getting into arguments with people on the 'net about Amway, because my experience was completely different to theirs. Researching the company became a hobby. If someone is spouting BS I call it, doesn't matter whether it's on Amway or anything else.
I am pretty active in discouraging everyone I know from getting involved in it (and all MLM products) because I've seen first-hand how bad it can be. My aunt lost everything she had because she got sucked in to this trap. I lost my best friend because I wouldn't join his downline (he's no longer involved and we've reconciled). It does tear apart families and friends and can lead to financial ruin. That's why I'm here, anyway.
And yet I made money, learned a lot, and never lost a friend. Don't you think maybe it's possible
both experiences occur? That it's not the model per se, but the way people operate it that causes problems?
I can't say the way people operate it is
entirely independent of the model itself. The low cost of entry pretty much guarantees you'll get (a) a lot of non-serious people give it a try (so high "failure") and (b) a lot of scam companies using it.
But the low cost of entry is also a great attraction of the model, making it an open opportunity, both for companies wanting to get a product to market and people wanting to start a business.