pipelineaudio
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2006
- Messages
- 5,092
Anyone have a good link to one of those charts that shows how just a few levels deep you'd run out of people on the planet?
Anyone have a good link to one of those charts that shows how just a few levels deep you'd run out of people on the planet?
I've used this page before, the url helps to frame the discussion
http://www.consumerfraudreporting.org/MLM_pyramid.php
I've used this page before, the url helps to frame the discussion
http://www.consumerfraudreporting.org/MLM_pyramid.php
I've used this page before, the url helps to frame the discussion
http://www.consumerfraudreporting.org/MLM_pyramid.php
It's a graph of what happens with pyramid schemes, not with legitimate multilevel marketing operations.
The fact there are MLM companies that have been in existence nearly 80+ years and their distributor networks extend literally thousands of levels deep should give you a bit of a hint that there's something flawed in the underlying thesis that they're destined to collapse within a few "levels".
That chart, indeed entire page, is from the school of "MLM=Pyramid Scheme therefore MLM has the flaws of Pyramid Scheme".
It's a graph of what happens with pyramid schemes, not with legitimate multilevel marketing operations.
The fact there are MLM companies that have been in existence nearly 80+ years and their distributor networks extend literally thousands of levels deep should give you a bit of a hint that there's something flawed in the underlying thesis that they're destined to collapse within a few "levels".
The problem as documented in Ogunjobi, Timi (2008). SCAMS - and how to protect yourself from them is that MLM is effectively an outdated business model whose time has passed. The internet with it ability to advertise and distribute directly to consumers has rendered MLM obsolete.

A response to that -"Roland Whitsell, a former business professor who spent 40 years researching and teaching the pitfalls of multilevel marketing": "You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone making over $1.50 an hour, (t)he primary product is opportunity. The strongest, most powerful motivational force today is false hope." (O'Donnell, Jayne (February 10, 2011). "Multilevel marketing or 'pyramid?' Sales people find it hard to earn much". USAToday)
Should we move this to the "conspiracies" section? How big bad MLM companies have successfully managed to somehow con the FTC under numerous different political leaders for several decades, not to mention similar bodies in countries all around the world?The old adage of if it look like a duck quacks like a duck then it is duck applies. The fact that the MLM lobby has squelched numerous attempts by the FTC to bring them under standard franchise rules
The problem as documented in Ogunjobi, Timi (2008). SCAMS - and how to protect yourself from them is that MLM is effectively an outdated business model whose time has passed. The internet with it ability to advertise and distribute directly to consumers has rendered MLM obsolete.
"Roland Whitsell, a former business professor who spent 40 years researching and teaching the pitfalls of multilevel marketing": "You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone making over $1.50 an hour, (t)he primary product is opportunity. The strongest, most powerful motivational force today is false hope." (O'Donnell, Jayne (February 10, 2011). "Multilevel marketing or 'pyramid?' Sales people find it hard to earn much". USAToday)
The old adage of if it look like a duck quacks like a duck then it is duck applies. The fact that the MLM lobby has squelched numerous attempts by the FTC to bring them under standard franchise rules (which would help cull all the bad apples out there) shows that the MLM industry is the modern equivalent of snake oil salesmen with the MLM itself as the snake oil.
Ah yes, nothing like choosing a "Technical Writer, Web Developer and Open Source Evangelist" who writes books on Jooma and Drupal as your expert source on marketing trends in business.![]()
Spot on. MLM today is similar to door to door sales people. The only difference is the ability to place internet orders. The recruiting and product pitch is done person to person, one at a time. The grand daddy of MLM's, Amway, has restrictions on advertising, rendering their own sales force ineffective. Many groups at one time or another adopted the "buy from yourself" model of doing business. Thus recruiting was just about the only way to profit.
The real product in most MLM's, is false hope and the opportunity itself rather than products.
Oh yes suggesting a book there a guy has a cat as a business partner and falsely claiming it was from a recognized publishing companies and was not self-published and claiming for weeks that it wasn't self published when called on the carpet is SO much better. Sheesh.
I should note that Financial & Tax Fraud Education Associates (cited in Forbes Best of the web 2000) has a long article on Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) that basically says the same thing as Ogunjobi does.
Right and when you look at the majority of peer-reviewed material on the MLM individual (as opposed to MLM companies as a whole) the overwhelming majority of it is negative.
With the internet just what is the purpose of a MLM? There is a reason the door to door salesman largely disappeared.
Wow, nice little tantrum there. That all you've got?
Ahh yes, well, I guess the CMS expert on the blogger are definitely far more authoritive than anything like, well, laws, not to mention reality.
Not that it matters, but I notice that claim about "best of the web" seems to have no sourcing (except, I'm guessing, you)
Considering you have in the past claimed a peer review article wasn't and other nonsense this shouldn't surprise anyone.
"Build Your Own Soapbox". Forbes. 2000-09-11 found via Google in a minute.
The reality is MLM is more often then not a pyramid scheme using promises of great wealth to entice people.
"That has sparked a growing debate over whether Herbalife and other multi-level marketing companies are essentially pyramid schemes. That's when distributors make more money recruiting other sellers, rather than selling the products themselves, with profits flowing to the very top at the expense of those at the bottom."
Fortune Hi-Tech Marketing is yet another example and in that case the FTC has finally gotten off it duff and done something.
Right and when you look at the majority of peer-reviewed material on the MLM individual (as opposed to MLM companies as a whole) the overwhelming majority of it is negative.
I am reminded of an old black and white documentary on organized crime that talked about the lotteries they offered. 'They were selling dreams. And that is what the people buying into them were paid off in--dreams.' These lotteries were very profitable for the mobsters and they rarely if ever paid out on a winner.
With the internet just what is the purpose of a MLM? There is a reason the door to door salesman largely disappeared.
What we need is a MLM company to sell PMMs. Both seem to rely on the same basic notion.