About Me

Name: Icarus
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

My Letter to Seattle P-I Re: Network Marketing

Dear Seattle-PI Editors,

Warning your readers about scams and frauds provides your readers a great service (State warns job hunters: Be alert for scams - 1/26/09). Condemning an entire industry during the course of this warning, however, serves no one and keeps Seattle P-I readers ignorant of an amazing opportunity for both personal and professional development.

In the article linked above characterized the entire Network Marketing industry (also referred to as Multilevel Marketing or Direct Sales) as comprising nothing but “con artists”. The article’s author wrote, “Con artists are placing ads online and in newspaper classifieds offering the chance to earn extra income by working at home.” This may have been an honest mistake; nothing more than a poor choice of words by the reporter. However, it plants in the reader’s mind the idea that everyone who offers a home-based business opportunity in the Network Marketing industry is a “con artist”. Nothing could be further from the truth. Millions of entrepreneurs are building strong home-based businesses in Network Marketing everyday. It is as legitimate an industry as Retail Selling, Construction or Automotive Manufacturing.

Network Marketing is a distribution method that effectively and efficiently moves products directly from the Manufacturer to the End User. Some well-known companies using this method of distribution are Amway, Herbalife, Nuskin, Mary Kay and Usana Health Sciences. In America there are well over a 1,000 companies that use Network Marketing to move products to millions of people every year. According to the Direct Selling Association, Network Marketing moved approximately $30.8 Billion in goods and services in the United States in 2007. Worldwide this figure rises to approximately $110 Billion. Furthermore, in 2007, 71% of individuals involved with Network Marketing had some college, were college graduates or had a postgraduate degree. I certainly hope American colleges and universities are not in the practice of producing “con artists”.

Donald Trump and Robert Kiyosaki, bestselling author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, both endorse the Network Marketing industry for people looking for additional streams of income. In the book Why we want you to be Rich, Kiyosaki wrote, “I recommend the [Network Marketing] industry for people who want to change and get the necessary skills and attitude training to be successful [business owners]”. In that same book Trump wrote, “Network marketing has proven itself to be a viable and rewarding source of income, and the challenges could be just right for you.” Furthermore, in 2003 Warren Buffet acquired Pampered Chef, a Network Marketing company with about $740 Million in sales in 2003. Are these powerful business leaders endorsing an industry full of nothing but “con artists”?   

Network Marketing is not for everyone. It requires hard work and the willingness to learn and operate outside one’s comfort zone. I came into the industry after the General Contractor I worked for laid me off in October 2008. In just a few short months, I have gained skills I never would have learned in my previous career. It has already paid significant dividends in my own personal development and I know I will have the opportunity to help others be successful.

Are there some involved in Network Marketing who will take advantage of people? Of course. Is any industry, however, comprised entirely of saints? Are there not individuals in the automotive industry who would take advantage of their customers? Have not more than a few people felt “conned” by the banking and mortgage industries? What about the energy industry; ever hear of Enron? There are bad apples in any business, but they do not invalidate the industry itself. People should be aware of unscrupulous activity no matter what the industry is, and when they decide to pursue a business opportunity, they must do their due diligence.

Network Marketing requires due diligence, hard work and persistence. For those willing to put in the time and effort, however, it offers the freedom and opportunity that no J-O-B ever will.

Most Sincerely,

Daniel Crandall, M.A.

Independent Associate - USANA Health Sciences

http://dpcrandall.usana.com

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive