oh dear.
I mean I have a friend that works for a company that sells deodorant and many of the same products whatevertheheck Amway is calling itself.
The COMPANY pays for him to go to conferences and for furthering his education.
The COMPANY also gets most of the profit. I own several businesses and none of the companies I buy the products I market from pay for me to go to conferences etc. In fact they charge me. Amway's conferences are generally free or close to it, what you are probably referring to is the conferences etc of a number of separate independent companies that have sprung up to support Amway business owners.
The company he works for also does not run ads that seem to be selling "work for us" rather than a product. I mean the ad talks about the product, but not where to get it.
There are other ads talking about that. These ads are purely brand building. Nike ads don't give the name of a local store either.
You get it by going to someone that tries to recruit you. Because that's how they make money. NOT by selling product, but getting someone else to sell product and get involved in recruiting more people.
Um, no. You actually make *less* money per sale by getting someone else involved and them selling the product. What you might do is increase volume. Just like a clothing store might employee staff, at expense, in the hope of increasing sales volume and overall profit. There's no money just in recruiting.
Oddly no, real business does not work that way. Pyramid schemes work that way.
No "real business"? Some network marketing agents have yearly turnovers in the
billions and employ numerous support staff in addition to other agents. Not a real business? IRS and other government all seem to think so. Businesses recruit staff in order to increase sales. Network markets recruit other agents in order to increase sales. Same thing.
Pyramids recruit particpant because they make money from the recruiting. Neither traditional businesses or network markets make money from the recruiting.
Well if it's fun for you and makes you happy go for it. I have a friend that sells Mary kay. She loves the product and is still at the bottom rung and will never ever get a pink cadillac. She has even been told to QUIT by the higher ups because she never recruits anyone. She refuses saying throwing a couple of parties a month is her idea of fun and she gets her own make up for a great discount.
Good for her! She clearly understands the differences between the business opportunity and how some folk (her higher ups in this case) wish to run it.
Makes you happy fine, but you sounds a wee bit indoctrinated. Ask most people about their work, and you'll hear a LOT of complaints. Hey everyone has a job that has a few things that make them nuts and if you say, "boy that coffee machine never works right!" and "my coworker plays her ipod so loud I can' hear it!" that's normal You don't get that with Amway-whatever because they ALL love it.
So you think it's better to whinge and complain than be supportive? Don't worry, folk talk about problems all the time, and there's plenty to complain about.
Or hate it (which happens later) with a deep an all abidiing passion. It's either or.
Find me one person that is "oh well, it was ok" and I'll be a believer.
Ok - me. I'm an ex-Amway guy. I enjoyed it, made some money, went on to other things. A decade or so later, got approached by a friend, got involved again. There's plenty of "oh well, it was ok" folk, they're just not much motivated to go talk about it on the 'net. Why would they?