Sure they do. What they don't do is implore people to not only sell the product, but to sell the system to their friends, family, and whomever else to artificially move the product when basic advertising doesn't work.
So if a friend shows me a product, and I like it and decide to buy it, it's artificial demand?
Why?
Tide isn't selling because I signed people up below me who feel the need to buy it to support the program. Tide sells because people say "hey, that's a good product, I'm going to purchase it."
I buy Amway SA8 because I tried it and said "hey, that's a good product, I'm going to purchase it."
I gather it's your belief that the vast majority of people who buy Amway products do so because they think doing so will make them rich or something?
You may have figures to prove me wrong here, but how many people are buying, for instance, Amway's product who aren't a part of Amway?
First could you answer a question for me - how many people are buying CostCo products that aren't members of CostCo?
If nothing else, it's 2013, and I could much easier and quicker watch a demonstration on Youtube, than to have to have someone in my home.
How well does that work with say, the smell of perfume, the taste of an energy drink etc etc etc?
Sure a youtube video is quicker, but do you really think it's the same as
actually trying a product?
Plus, they aren't just selling me the product. They are also trying to make me a saleman, too. Big difference. No one is enticing me to buy Tide by telling me that I'll make money if I also sell the Tide.
No one is enticing me to buy Amway product by telling me that I'll make money if I also sell Amway products either.
Do some people
try the product because they're intrigued by the business opportunity? Sure, of course. Some people try a product because there's a competition with a chance to win a trip, or you get bonus points on your loyalty card this week ... all sorts of incentives are common in the marketplace.
Do some people buy products out of some misguided idea that doing so will somehow make them rich? Sure. They're idiots. That's clearly not the basis of a sustainable business and is arguably a pyramid scheme. Amway kicked out a significant number of leaders a few years back because they thought that's exactly what they were encouraging people to do.