I've read comments from folks who claim they've applied for sales jobs advertised on websites such as Craigslist only to discover that they've been duped by an Amway IBO fraudster who has posted a bogus job ad.
Craigslist's terms of service expressly specify that MLM representatives are not permitted to post there, but they do so anyway, and Amway Independent Business Owners (IBOs) are not the only ones who do so, but they are the bulk of those who do so. Typically, these ads are flagged off if they overtly mention the MLM or one of the items, which may cause some job seekers to become suspicious of who is posting them.
If you're seeking for a legitimate sales position and react to an ad and are then called in for a "interview" at a local coffee shop, you must be feeling pretty miserable if you're then nailed with an Amway board plan presentation.
Securing employment is difficult enough without having to deal with filthy MLM scammers that attempt to snare you into their pyramid scheme.
Ambot and I were walking down the street when we observed a sign hung on a telephone pole. The specifics of the working were hazy in my memory, but it suggested something to the effect of being your own boss and running a health, sports, and beauty company. Despite the fact that it was badly painted, it includes a toll-free number (Communikate?) to give it a more authentic appearance and feel. We have a strong suspicion that it was Scamway.
MLM members who are attempting to "build their business" will also target people who upload their resumes on various job sites in the same way. In fact, you don't even need a resume; you can simply post an ad on Craigslist for whatever you want to sell, and some deranged ambot can call pretending to be interested in purchasing your item, only to surprise you with an Amway presentation on the spot.
These ambots must constantly come up with fresh and inventive ways to deceive their targets.
Being an Amway Independent Business Owner is nothing more than a fancy phrase for working as a commissioned salesperson, which is what it is. Amway is simply a sales job, no matter how hard your upline tries to convince you that it is not a legitimate business. I suppose they were partially correct. Instead of selling Amway items, it is more common for people to consume them. However, in order to be successful in Amway, you must be good at sales, whether it's selling the board plan and recruiting independent business owners (IBOs) into your downline, or selling overpriced substandard products and mastering the art of selling down to convince buyers that this shit is actually of high quality.
It's similar to a sales work cycle that goes in circles. When gullible salespeople buy Amway products, they are instructed to recruit other salespeople to market the Amway products on their behalf. They then stroll throughout the area, placing advertisements in people's mailboxes and posting signs on telephone poles, as well as posting bogus sales job advertisements on Craiglist, once they have exhausted all of their friends and family, as well as random people in the mall. In order to complete the sale, the Ambot cult leaders place the recruit in front of their cult leaders as soon as they have a live prospect. The reason for this is that persons on the lower levels of the Amway pyramid, according to the upline, are too ignorant to close a transaction when it comes to recruiting new members into the cult.
This is a bogus enterprise. False job postings for sales positions. All of this, it appears, appears to be associated with Amway.
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