Wednesday, March 6, 2013

The Amway J-O-B Opportunity?

Amway IBOs like to call themselves "Independent Business Owners". But when you sit down and think about this for a minute, I believe that the Amway opportunity is more like a job. As an IBO, you are basically acting as a commissioned salesperson without any benefits coming from the Amway corporation. It's great for Amway as they only pay you for products that are moved. You receive no guaranteed salary or wage, and you get no fringe benefits such as health insurance. The time and expenses involved in moving product belongs to the IBO and the compensation plan doesn't pay very well unless you move a lot of volume.

The Amway corporation can sit back, and simply issue bonuses to downline IBOs. It is the IBOs themselves who recruit others, train others and move the products. Many IBOs are fiercely loyal to Amway products even when they could get the exact same product or a similar product, in many cases, at a fraction of the cost at a big box retailer, or even a local retailer. The IBO can also spend a significant amount of money learning to build an Amway business, as well as recruiting downline and trying to move some products.

Uplines get you to see the world differently. That you do not equate an hourly wage with your business. But if IBOs did think of their earnings that way, they would easily see that they are working to lose money or to make pennies an hour. For the larger majority of IBOs, working minimum wage would be far more lucrative than spending countless hours and money chasing an Amway dream that is very unlikely to materialize. Uplines also get you to think you are "investing" in your business by purchasing tools, but in reality, you are just a customer of your upline's tool business. They earn money by selling you training, even if you business is a failure despite your hard work and adherence to upline teaching.

You dedicate yourself to attending meetings, working the phones, meeting with uplines and downlines. You drive a lot of miles. But what many IBOs do not notice is that the priority in building a business should be a focus on getting more customers and expanding sales. But because Amway products can be hard to sell, most IBOs are focused on expanding their business by recruiting others. An endless chain of recruitment, which is why many people think of Amway as a pyramid scheme. Whether it's legal or not as is, is not my call. The continuous recruitment and attrition of downline make the Amway opportunity unsustainable in the long term. It is why the dreams of residual income is a myth. IBOs think they can earn lifelong residual income but how many IBOs can name even a single person who is doing this?

But the bottom line in my view, is that Amway is more like a job than an independent business. Call it what you will, but in either case, business or job, it doesn't pay well for most. You can also have your income stopped by Amway and restrictions placed on your business. Does that sound like independence to you?

2 comments:

Nix the Ever knowing soothe sayer to the stars said...

Thanks for this post. My mom got recruited last year and i got dragged last night to a meeting ( not by my mom because she finds it hard to sell). Im still thinking of joining but not to drag people into it but its because of Artistry makeup. Thats the only company that sells it here. Should I join r just ask my mom to buy it for me? The cost of the makeup that i want and the registration fee seems about the same. I suppose that kit wont include the make up that i want.


Anyway.. Just an observation from last night..
The up lines are the ones spending for meetings ?
Or well in someway I dont like it that I am supposed to almost always go attend meetings and pay for attending... Every week?
Its not nice to be dragged from one city to another to attend and pay for it when you could go out and sell..the only positive thing is that I get to meet new people.

Joecool said...

Hi Nix!

If you like the products, you can buy them from your mom or just go online and you can buy them from Amway or an IBO.

Yes, joining and attending the meetings can become expensive after a while, especially if you only want a product or two. Would you still buy the stuff if your mom weren't involved?