Monday 18 April 2016

Robert FitzPatrick asks - Are all 'MLMs' scams?

Could “all” MLMs be scams, financial traps in which less than 1% ever make money? Pyramid Scheme Alert is constantly asked this question, along with questions about specific MLM, (What About This One?)
Pyramid Scheme Alert  has not examined every single MLM but, among the hundreds we have examined, we have not found one yet that met the simple test of legitimacy. The test does not require years of analysis or evaluating the MLM product or pricing. It does not require a legal opinion. Legal or not, the test determines whether the MLM is a valid direct selling income opportunity. (this does not include “party plan” companies, which require some different tests, though some of the following analysis will apply.)
1. Not Direct Selling
We have not found a single MLM in which the majority of distributors (sometimes called IBOs, coaches, associates, etc.) makes a sustainable profit just from retailing the MLM’s product to the general public. We haven’t found one that can therefore be considered “direct selling.” We ask every inquiring consumer to find out if the current distributors are making a profit  from selling the goods to people, without also having to sign up new salespeople (to make money off their purchases and sales)? If not, then what is the real business, selling or recruiting? Recruiting salespeople who cannot make a profit from “selling” but must also recruit is not a business. It is a pyramid scheme.
If few or none of the salespeople earn sustainable profits from retailingalone, what is the actual value of the “distributorship”? Why are the salespeople recruiting more salespeople who presumably become their competitors? If you must recruit more “distributors” to make your distributorship have value, and all others must do the same, you are in a Ponzi scheme.
We have not found one MLM in which retail sales levels, average retail sales income, average retail profit margins, or the average tenure (turnover) of salespeople – the normal factors for evaluation – are disclosed during solicitation. This  makes due diligence impossible. There is a reason for this.  The only people in the MLMs that we have looked at that make any profit – usually 1-4% or less of the total distributors per year – are those at the top of the recruiting chain.
2. Paid to Recruit
All the MLMs we have examined pay a “commission” or “points” leading to a commission on the salesperson’s own purchases or on thepurchases of the salespeople they recruit, or both, whether the products are ever resold to the public or not.
When the MLM company pays commissions or awards “points” that lead to commissions based on what the salesperson or his/her recruits buy – the pay plan directly rewards endless recruiting. The MLM’s revenue base depends on getting the salespeople themselves to buy as part  of the “income proposition.” Since 99% normally lose, these purchases add to the recruits’ losses.
Additionally, it is obviously unethical and a conflict of interest to “manage” or “coach” a recruit whose personal purchases translate into commissions for the “coach” and other upline managers. The upline “coaches” make money, whether or not the persons being managed do, and they make it directly out of the pocket of the persons supposedly being “trained and supported”!! Even if some retailing occurs, if it is not sustainably profitable, then it is unfair to profit from those “failed” salespeople.
If commissions were only paid on retail sales, at least no one would make money upline until a downline person made some money in the legitimate open market. The focus would be on sales, not extending the sales chain.  We have not seen one case of a true retail-based MLM pay plan. As a result, we see only a few recruiters at the top making money, and all else losing.
3. Recruiting as the Only Viable Path to Profit
The sustainable profits in the MLMs we examined, even if some amount of retailing is occurring, comes only when a person reaches the higher levels – executive, gold, president, or some other high position on the chain. To get to that profitable position, all the MLMs that we examinedrequired volume purchase quotas that could only be reached if one had a large “downline.” Why is the MLM person required to maintain a high quota or a specified level of recruits in order to benefit from past recruiting? Two reasons: (1)to keep everyone buying and recruiting and (2)because when they don’t meet their quotas (and nearly all will not), all their accrued payments go to those above them – to the top. The quota and “structure” rules induce buying and recruiting among the salespeople, and when that ends, the requirements serve to transfer accrued rewards lost by the “quitters and losers” upwards to the top.
Where MLMs have specified recruiting requirements the MLM participant must have specified numbers of recruits in specific configurations, e.g., to be “gold” one must have five “silvers”  and those five “silvers” must each have 3 qualified “aluminum foils” in the level below them, etc., the so-called “building structure” method of moving up.  The higher one goes up the ladder – by recruiting, not personally selling – the higher the commission rate on all the purchases he/she makes plus all those made by the entire downline. So the incentive to recruit is compounding!
When the volume quota is not met or the “structure” breaks due a lower level person not meeting his/her own quota, then the commission amount is drastically slashed, even to the point of losing everything that has been built up.
Because the volume quota and structure requirements can only be maintained by those at the very top, the bottom and middle levels “fail” and quit at rates as high as 80% or more per year.
The quota, the recruiting requirements and the constant turnover of recruits put the MLM participant on a relentless, desperate recruiting treadmill to shore up his “downline.” Some spend all their waking hours and weekends recruiting and hyping.
None of this has anything at all to do with “part time” or “home-based” “direct selling.” It is all about building a recruitment pyramid and maintaining recruit purchasing. This is the system in every MLM we looked at.
4. Profit Reserved only for those at the Top
This is hard to explain to people who are blinded by dreams of wealth and happiness that the MLM scheme has promoted. But it is otherwise   obvious to see. If profit comes from building a “downline”, then only those at the top of the downline can ever be profitable. For there to be a “winner” at the top, there must be “losers” below. The ratio of losers to winners is pre-determined, usually 100 to 1. It takes a hundred recruits who are losing for one to win anything. This ratio is built into the pyramid “business model.” No matter how large the MLM gets, the percentage of losers and winners remains constant.
Since there is no sustainable profit from just retailing (costs and time outweigh income), but only from recruiting, and the recruiter must have a “structure” with a large “group volume,” there will always be just atiny few winners. The MLM is not an opportunity “for everyone”, as the MLMs always claim, but only for a very few. We have not found a single MLM in which more than 1 in 100 made any profit at all in a year, and a much smaller percentage made sustainable incomes when all recruits are included over a longer time. This success rate does not qualify as an “opportunity.” Gambling at a casino offers better chances.
5. The trick, the delusion and the fraud of the “endless chain”
Those blinded by “unlimited income” promises made by the MLM and the testimonials of “$10,000 per month” have a hard time seeing the “endless chain” trick. That’s why it works!
All the MLMs we have examined play this trick on the recruits. They offer “unlimited” income based on a chain of recruits that never ends. The last person to join is offered exactly the same incentives to recruit as the first people were when the company was started, as if the market size never reduces. It is always “unlimited.” This promise is inherently deceptive and is at the root of why MLMs cause huge failure rates.
The endless chain trick claims everyone can make “unlimited” money even though the money on which the income would be based is the participants’ own money! An obviously limited amount of money is said to have the potential to generate “unlimited” rewards. This truly is the miracle of the loaves and fishes performed by MLM magicians. If 1,000 people all buy  $1,000 of products on average, there is $1 million in revenue. That’s all there is to pay rewards from. So how could everyone make more than they paid in? Obviously, some of the money from many of the 1,000 will be transferred to a few in that group. Why would some get more? Because they are at the top of the chain or joined earlier than others, that’s all. Reward depends on “position” and timing.  Most must therefore lose (receive less than they paid in). If some are making large incomes, then nearly all the others have to lose.
Hold on, what if some put in more or did some retailing? It doesn’t matter. The total is still a fixed amount. For anyone to get out of the MLM more than they put in (including their retail profits gained from personal selling) requires taking money from some of the others. It is a money transfer scheme.
But, wait, even if it is a transfer, can’t the losers at the end of the chain make money by increasing the size of the chain beyond 1,000, that is by becoming the “upline” to new recruits who would become their “downline”?
Yes, that is, in fact, the only actual way they can make money. The problem is that  expansion cannot go on forever. Markets are limited. And for whatever time it continues, the money for rewards will still always be the money that everyone inside the chain paid in. The ratio of the winners to losers will be the same and the only way for anyone to make money will be by transferring “losses” from most to the few winners.
So the promise of money for all or even the chance for money for all could only be true if the MLM scheme could expand into eternity. If a person falls for this trick, they have joined the MLM cult in which the leaders are seen as super-humans and the followers are told they are  special people who will go to financial heaven (wealth beyond your wildest dreams), but only as long as they follow all the rules exactly as prescribed by the leaders. And indeed, it is impossible not see that some MLMs are cults, with members who worship the leaders, stop thinking for themselves and sacrifice their whole lives for the scheme.
The MLM cult rules always require continued paying of money to the MLM’s and free marketing work for the MLM. Doubting the rules or the promise is a MLM sin. Questions are MLM heresy. Criticism of MLM is treated as evil. Even associating with non-believers in MLM is discouraged. This is not business.
Since every MLM we have examined is designed exactly on this same impossible model of “endless expansion”, we must conclude they have based their promise on a lie.
So, for these reasons – lack of retail profit opportunity, commission paid on recruits’ purchases, recruiting/volume quotas, profits based on pyramid recruiting and the “endless chain” lie – we inform consumers to avoid  schemes that have these characteristics. And all the MLMs we have looked at have them!

Robert FitzPatrick (copyright 2014)

4 comments:

  1. Can you please explain what the difference is between the typical MLM “companies” and the “party plan type?

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    1. Anonymous - All so-called 'Multi-Level Marketing' companies have pretended to offer legal direct selling schemes which pay commission to non-salaried agents on the agent's sales of products/services to customers and end users.

      There are some so-called 'MLM' companies, like 'Pampered Chef' which at a glance have appeared to operate as banal 'party plan' schemes, and which have temporarily exploited their recruits' relationships based on love and trust. Generally, recruits of companies like 'Pampered Chef' have only been able to organise a few parties at which they managed to sell products at fixed prices to their supportive friends and relatives, but they soon find that they cannot sustain this activity. They are told that they can make big bucks by recruiting more non-salaried agents. Thus 'party plan MLMs' can appear to have external sources of revenue - making them more difficult to investigate/analyse.

      The more-typical 'MLM' front companies, like 'Amway' , 'Herbalife', 'Forever Living Products,' etc., have ensnared never-ending chains of de facto slaves by supplying their non-salaried agents with effectively-unsaleable products /services at controlled prices, whilst offering to pay escalating sales commission to their non-salaried agents on purchases which they make themselves and on the purchases of any non-salaried agents whom they recruit, and on the purchases of the non-salaried recruits of their non-salaried recruits, etc., ad infinitum.

      Thus, these are not multi-level direct sales schemes, they are fraudulent infinite-level buying schemes - dissimulated rigged markets in which ill-informed victims have been peddled infinite shares of their own finite money. The effectively-unsaleable products' real function has been to launder unlawful losing investment payments.

      Coupled with these dissimulated rigged market swindles, have been secondary advance fee frauds - in which 'MLM' adherents have been peddled 'step-by-step plans to achieve success.'

      These 'plans' lure 'MLM' adherents into accepting coordinated devious techniques of persuasion designed to cut them off from external reality, prevent them from quitting and blame them for failing to make money.

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  2. Argh, I just spent the last hour writing my story and thanking you for your blog, only to have it all disappear when I hit preview. This is the 3rd time this has happened to me on your site. My above comment worked apparently because I changed the “comment as” to Anonymous from Google, which I hadn’t done before and which I failed to do just now. So I guess I’ll have to save it for another time. Frustrating, but nothing compared to the frustration I feel over the widespread acceptance of MLM as a legitimate business.

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    1. Anonymous - I'm now frustrated that your comments have vanished, but you can also write to me here:

      axiombooks@wanadoo.fr

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