Over the years, I have come across a large number of IBOs, and they all seem to share a common feature. They have faith in their upline and, in certain situations, regard them as mentors. Now, having a mentor or someone to lead you through a business venture may be beneficial, but with the Amway opportunity, the majority of upline mentors receive compensation from individuals who they mentor. That is a significant conflict of interest, but IBOs are incapable of recognising it. Almost all "assistance" you receive results in compensation for someone higher up the line. It transforms your "mentor" into something more like to a help consultant. If you hire a hired consultant, you will make money even if you leave your job.
Whenever an IBO attends a large gathering or function, the speaker is frequently positioned as a financial guru, as well as an expert on how to be successful in Amway, according to the speaker. An IBO may hear that the trail has already been blazed by upline, and that all that is required is that you simply follow the trail. Don't reinvent the wheel; instead, duplicate what your upline has done. However, as I have stated numerous times before, duplication appears to be simple and straightforward on paper, but in practise, the vast majority of independent business owners (IBOs) encounter difficulties that they are unable to overcome, such as the poor reputation that the Amway name has in the United States. Product prices that are too high also do not help. Because of the terrible reputation, it is tough to demonstrate the plan and to sponsor downline members.
One of the most concerning aspects of this is that IBOs are taught to trust their upline and to do as they say (a de facto obligation), but they are also taught that failure is the result of their own deficiencies, even when they do precisely what their upline instructed. It is also concerning that many uplines would persuade their loyal followers that they need to purchase more and more tools as time progresses in their business (voicemail, cds, books, seminar tickets). In some circumstances, an upline may persuade their downline to forego fundamental family necessities in order to purchase these equipment. Several IBOs were instructed to forgo meals in order to purchase a CD, or to delay payments on their home in order to be able to attend the next large function. Some people have suffered greatly as a result of the outcomes. What type of business would anyone be in if they were given that kind of advice? I can only think of one company: Amway.
I'd also like to point out that if you're a newer IBO or prospect, you may have heard that "everyone starts at zero" or that the playing field is level. It is not the case. As a fresh IBO, you will very certainly fall into the 100 PV range. Because Amway pays out around 30 percent in incentives, your upline(s) will receive approximately 27 percent in bonuses for their efforts, while you will receive a 3 percent bonus for yours. That doesn't strike me as being particularly level. In addition, when you purchase tools, you are paying for this privilege on behalf of your IBO.
As a result, each IBO should examine the situation objectively and determine whether your upline is truly assisting you or simply benefiting himself by providing you with advice that results in profit for him but little or no benefit for you.
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