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“”But in the land of MLMs, failure is just another opportunity.
|
| —Brandy Zadrozny[1] |
Multilevel marketing (MLM) or network marketing is a type of unfair and deceptive financial woo, purportedly a business, promoted by a non-salaried workforce selling a company's product(s) or service(s) independently. Sellers get paid according to a commission structure that heavily incentivizes endless recruitment.
MLM presents itself as a "business opportunity," with products ostensibly on sale to the general public. However, MLM doesn't resemble any other retail model at all, and what it does strongly resemble is a pyramid scheme[2][3][4][5] — the underlying mathematics of the two are identical. Regulators have characterized MLM as a form of gambling or lottery.[6][7] Some MLMs resemble cults.[8] The MLM industry denies that MLMs are anything other than normal, legitimate businesses, and unlike pyramid schemes, MLMs operate openly and (just this side of) legally in most countries.[9]
According to numerous independent analyses and the MLM industry itself, the vast majority of MLM distributors make little to no money or lose money;[2] according to one researcher, "you'd be hard-pressed to find anyone [in network marketing] making more than $1.50 an hour".[10] Some MLM participants lose much more than just money, squandering social capital and damaging careers, reputations, and relationships.[11]
With all this, not to mention numerous high-profile failures and legal troubles,[12] it's no wonder MLMs have a poor reputation with consumers.[13] Nevertheless, in the USA alone, MLMs had a combined total of more than 20 million members and generated more than $36 billion in revenue in 2015.[14] The situation is worse in emerging economies in regions like Latin America, Africa and Asia.[7][8][15][16]
Multilevel marketing began in the 1920s.[17] The largest and most well-established MLM, Amway (founded in 1959), has heavily influenced the style of virtually every MLM that has come and gone since.
In mainstream terms, it's most similar to franchising, where a business operator buys the rights to a specific brand and in turn receives support from the company that owns the brand. But there are two big differences:
Essentially, the idea is that any given upline collects a cut of the sales from every member of their downline. As a result, the only path to solvency for the upline is to make sure that the downline recruits as heavily as possible, with as deep a pyramid beneath them as possible — as opposed to conventional businesses, where the path to solvency is to sell sufficient product to consumers.
The problem is that in a recruiting-driven MLM, there is no upper bound save the market population itself, and the bottom rung of distributors makes no money at all except from sales. This ensures a fierce scramble among distributors to sign up their own downline (Amway in particular is notoriously aggressive about this) so they can move up the ladder, often to the exclusion of product sales, and also ensuring market saturation — most distributors wind up selling only to themselves and perhaps a few friends, with only the most driven (and often least principled) making any money at all.
Another common practice is "channel stuffing," requiring distributors to buy large minimums of company product, ostensibly for retail sale or for "personal use," which serves to inflate sales numbers to give the appearance that an MLM is more sales-driven than it really is. However, the only support materials usually provided by their recruiter(s) are ones that promote the signing on of more new distributors. As a result, many a person out there has a closet full of Mary Kay cosmetics or Lularoe clothes that they don't need and can't sell. Type the name of any well-known MLM into eBay or Craigslist and you'll see evidence of what becomes of that "investment" of "just a few hundred dollars" made in order to achieve new wealth and prosperity in ten hours a week from home.
A few MLMs (Mary Kay, Avon) are significantly more sales-driven, with a larger customer base, and offer more added value to customers. They are still definitely not without controversy or criticism, however — no MLM is.[18]
MLM has its origins in direct selling, which developed in the rural United States, where supply lines were limited and retail options were scarce. In the olden days, this meant the Avon lady going door-to-door, or the woman down the street holding a Tupperware party, but in the modern era, direct selling can more broadly refer to any retail business that is conducted person-to-person (including electronically) rather than at a retail store.
Direct selling does not necessarily incorporate the endless chain of recruiting that makes MLM so controversial, and is not necessarily unethical. However, the modern direct selling industry is utterly dominated by MLMs. According to the Deceptive Direct Selling Association (DSA), the industry's trade association and lobbying arm, 97% of its members are MLMs as of 2017.[19] The distinction between direct selling and network marketing, which many MLMs hide behind to maintain their legitimacy, is therefore essentially meaningless today.
In a classic and severe case of crank magnetism, MLMs are notorious for specializing in products of dubious value (supplements, essential oils, laundry balls) and making pseudoscientific, questionable, or outright false claims.
MLMs and related schemes are remarkably uniform in their structure and business model, the appearance/writing style of their promotional materials, and the behavior of their members. They'll deny it, which sometimes makes them difficult to spot, but the similarities reveal themselves with even the smallest amount of due diligence and research, and are surprisingly consistent.
A business is likely to be an MLM or related scheme if it exhibits one or more of the following traits. Many of these traits are, of course, red flags in general — not just warning signs of an MLM.
The only word that makes drinkers of MLM Kool-Aid bristle quicker than pyramid is cult. It's a bold accusation, one not to be trotted out lightly, but there's simply no other way to describe the techniques MLMs use to attract and retain recruits.
MLM culture feels unmistakably totalitarian. The organization is tightly controlled by the top 0.1% of the pyramid, and absolute loyalty to one's upline is strictly enforced. Open criticism of the company or its leadership is discouraged. Members denigrate non-MLM employment and belittle non-MLM jobs. MLM gatherings, often referred to as "seminars" or "conventions" or "business retreats," look nothing like any of these things; instead, they feature chanting, ecstatic speeches, testimonials, and highly-produced audiovisuals, often for hours on end.[45]
The most cult-like thing about MLM is that it manipulates members' existing beliefs and desires and tricks them into believing they are exercising free will. MLMs are able to coerce people into willful and compliant self-destruction on a staggering scale: we're talking quitting or getting fired from a six-figure full-time job due to an MLM, alienating everyone you know with your constant sales-pitches, investing your own or someone else's life savings into an MLM, ruining your credit or losing collateral by borrowing heavily to fund an MLM addiction, and even theft to support an MLM habit.[46] Suicides related to MLM have been reported.[47]
As a means of moving capital from the bottom of the pyramid to the top, MLMs are very effective; their chief promoters and high-level members aren't lying when they boast of the money they've made from the scheme. However, as a business model (i.e., a means of creating and capturing capital), MLMs are hilariously ineffective, like a toddler imagining what it's like to start a business. Here are just a few of the reasons why.
MLMs blur the line between "contractor" and "customer." That's because participants aren't just required to sell products; they're required to recruit other people, presumably in the same general geographic area, who also sell the same products. When you recruit someone, you've just created a competitor, which will decrease your own sales. What you gain from recruiting that person (i.e. the cut from their sales) is never enough to offset the loss of your own sales, and thus your own income.
MLMs often teach their participants to recruit their best customers. What kind of normal business turns one of its best assets into a liability? Imagine if the local Starbucks started encouraging all its best customers to open up their own Starbucks, where all the customers would, in turn, be encouraged to open up their own Starbucks. How long before there are too many Starbucks and no paying customers left? Which brings us to point #2...
The main pitch of most MLMs is passive income: the promise of being able to sit back and relax while someone else does all the work. But if everybody wants to "let someone else sell the products," who will actually do the selling?
Example: Let's say I sell $10,000 of widgets every month, and my profit margin, after accounting for all expenses, is 10% — $1,000 per month. Let's say I decide to start an MLM business and I recruit another distributor, who takes over all my leads. We'll make a REALLY generous assumption that my distributor's profit margin is 5% — many MLM products don't even scrape 1%.
So now, I'm making $500/month without doing anything. That's only half my previous income, so I still need to sell widgets to maintain the same income as before. But I no longer have my old leads, since I just created my own competitor. Let's make another EXTREMELY generous assumption that my new distributor has found some new customers and increased sales by 10%. Total sales are now $11,000, but the money is now split between two people, so each of us sells $5,500 in widgets and pockets $550, and the upline (me) pockets an additional $275 as commission (5%). So I now make $825 per month.
What if I recruit more distributors? Then can I stop selling? Assume each new guy manages to expand the business by 10% — again, EXTREMELY generous. With two sellers, total sales are $12,000 so I make $600 doing nothing, and each distributor in my downline makes $600 in direct profit. Even if each distributor increases sales by 10%, I'd still have to recruit at least 10 people and DOUBLE my total sales in order to profit at least as much as before while doing nothing. With ten distributors and me at the top, total sales are $20,000. I make my $1,000, and they each make $200 (10% profit).
The choice is pretty clear: why would I work my butt off every month selling widgets to make $1,000, when I can make the same money by recruiting ten other people to sell, and then do nothing? And when the distributors under me see me kicking back and relaxing, what motivation is there for them to do all the work and make a fifth of what I make?
In a normal business, the purpose of commissions is to encourage sales; in an MLM, the purpose of sales is to encourage commissions. Everyone wants to be at the top (earning commissions), and nobody wants to be on the bottom (selling). The fatal flaw of pyramid schemes (and MLM, by extension) is that there has to be a bottom somewhere. If everybody recruits and nobody sells, that's a pyramid scheme in all but name.
And again, this example scenario makes all kinds of assumptions (the profitability of the product, the availability of new recruits and new customers) that are absurd and completely unrealistic, which leads us to point #3...
The MLM "business model" can only be successful in an environment where there is:
None of these conditions exist anywhere in the real world. Markets change, trends come and go, customers are fickle and demanding, and competitors constantly enter/exit the market. There isn't an endless supply of people willing to serve as self-appointed salespeople in any market, anywhere; some of us have better things to do than sell overpriced supplements to our friends on Facebook. And there are almost always plenty of competitive alternatives to every consumer product. So what inevitably follows is point #4...
Buying products from a network marketing company isn't cheaper, faster, or more pleasant than buying them on the open market, and it's often considerably worse in all three of these categories. That's because unlike normal retail business, where the supply chain is direct and logical (from manufacturer, to wholesaler, to retailer, to customer), in MLMs the supply chain follows the customer's upline, accumulating markups and compounding inefficiencies at each level of the pyramid. The result is higher prices, frequent unexplained delays, and products that are constantly "on back-order."[45] MLMs will often try to artificially suppress competition by claiming their product is unique or superior to all others — sometimes even claiming that their competitors' products are poisonous or even Satanic[53][54] — but equivalent products are always available from normal retail outlets, often at a fraction of the cost.
Even in the digital age, the brick-and-mortar retail experience is preferable to MLM: it's more convenient and does not open people up to accusations of conning their friends with substandard products or high prices. Internet and catalog shopping and reliable shipping services have long since obviated the need for a tightly-knit distributor network serving remote areas; in urban areas, where retail shopping has always been fairly available, MLMs were never important to begin with.[55]
So-called "direct selling" and its bastard child, MLM, seem quaint and irrelevant — like print newspapers, typewriters or vinyl records. That's not to say there isn't a market for all these things; there is. But niche markets can never sustain the kind of infinite, boundless growth that's necessary for an MLM distributor to make the kind of money that's often advertised (unless they're at the top of the pyramid). Speaking of boundless growth, there's point #5...
In a normal sales business, you are hired and promoted based on a holistic assessment of a variety of factors: one's character, temperament, and contribution to the company and its profitability. In an MLM, there are no qualifications to join and you advance based on one factor alone: recruitment. The problem is that as the market saturates at an exponential rate, the pool of potential new recruits rapidly dries up, and new distributors must sink lower and lower and engage in steadily shadier and more desperate practices to build their downline. Far from being the behavior of "just a few bad apples," as the MLM industry would have you believe, this practice is encouraged and rewarded by a system that prioritizes raw recruitment numbers above all else. This virtually guarantees that the ones who make the most money in MLM are the ones with the fewest scruples — which is unsurprising, given point #6...
The loss rates for those at the bottom 99% of an MLM more closely resemble a casino game than a business:
To represent MLM distributorship as a "business opportunity" or "additional income stream" or "side hustle" — let alone claiming that it's a way to get rich — is manifestly deceptive and a complete misrepresentation. To succeed in an MLM, you must essentially con your downline into buying tickets for a plane that has already taken off.
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