What this slick operator above is describing is a pyramid scheme. Don't fall for it. Try offering some inexpensive items on e-bay, I know of two guys who make a good living selling silver jewelry online and manage to make a decent living. It just takes time there are no shortcuts.
2006-12-30 09:20:39
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answer #1
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answered by onelonevoice 5
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I am involved with a company that does network marketing. It's called USANA Health Sciences. Here is their website, so you can see what it's about. www.USANA.com
There are MANY network marketing companies in existence. Some are good and some are not. For this business to work, it needs two things: First, a quality product - without that, the bottom will eventually fall out. Secondly, a compensation plan that rewards harder worker, not just "people at the top". USANA meets both of these requirements.
Since vitamins are not drugs, they are not regulated by the FDA. Because of this, what it says on the label is often not what is in the bottle. USANA has voluntarily submitted to the FDA requirements of processing and quality of their products, and are listed in the PDR (Physician's Desk Reference). That means that what it says on the label is what's inside. Also, they do dissolve in you (many vitamins end up passing through you, often still in pill form!)
Early network marketing companies taught sponsoring as many people as possible, and some would make it, while most drop out. In USANA, a distributor's "front line" only has two people in it. Any others that he sponsors go under those people. I cannot make money until I'm helping those below me grow their business, and I don't necessarily make more than the people below me.
This company operates in a bunch of countries (USA, Australia, Japan, UK,New Zealand, Netherlands, Mexico, Korea, Hong Kong, Canada) and is going to start in Malaysia in 2007. Where are you? So far, my business is only in the USA, but will be in Mexico in January.
Let me know if you're interested. You can start a business center for a little less than $600, and most of that is vitamins that you'll be benefiting from anyhow. Or, if you'd like to try the vitamins yourself prior to deciding, we could do that.
Richard Teran
San Antonio, Texas, USA
teran_realtor@yahoo.com
richardteran@usana.com
210-710-7900 Cell
2006-12-30 09:28:00
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answer #2
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answered by teran_realtor 7
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Stay away from CashCreate, Treasure Trooper and other survey Web sites.
It is a waste of time and will cause you unhappiness.
If you choose to be suckered in and sign up to take surveys and receive, free trials considered you were warned. The minute you give them your credit card and personal information you have now opened your computer to unwanted cookies on your hard drive, annoying pop-up windows and if you are on a PC you open your computer to viruses that can wipe you out.
A lot of work to collect the "reward payments" that payout is not worth the effort over time. You will need to sign up for many types of offers, most of which require you to use a credit card. You start a week trial service with varies types of businesses or services, such as, an Internet service provider, book club, credit monitoring service, etc. to get your reward. If you don't cancel the trial, you end up being charged for the service and each service has different rules about how and when you can cancel. Very cumbersome!
Since you will need to sign up for at least a dozen offers before you get to $100 in rewards, it's very easy to forget what you have signed up for, or the problems you will have canceling in time to to be charged the full amount. The Cash Create recruiters you see here over exaggerate how much money you can earn because once you've done the high-dollar trials ($8-10 each), you are left with small rewards of a dollar or two. The survey business is not an efficient way to make money and you are more than likely to loose money in the end.
2006-12-30 09:30:39
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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