fbpx
Wikipedia

Multi-level marketing

Multi-level marketing (MLM), also called network marketing[1] or pyramid selling,[2][3][4] is a controversial[5] marketing strategy for the sale of products or services in which the revenue of the MLM company is derived from a non-salaried workforce selling the company's products or services, while the earnings of the participants are derived from a pyramid-shaped or binary compensation commission system.[6]

In multi-level marketing, the compensation plan usually pays out to participants from two potential revenue streams. The first is based on a sales commission from directly selling the product or service; the second is paid out from commissions based upon the wholesale purchases made by other sellers whom the participant has recruited to also sell product. In the organizational hierarchy of MLM companies, recruited participants (as well as those whom the recruit recruits) are referred to as one's downline distributors.[7]

MLM salespeople are, therefore, expected to sell products directly to end-user retail consumers by means of relationship referrals and word of mouth marketing, but more importantly they are incentivized to recruit others to join the company's distribution chain as fellow salespeople so that these can become downline distributors.[1][8] According to a report that studied the business models of 350 MLM companies in the United States, published on the Federal Trade Commission's website, at least 99% of people who join MLM companies lose money.[9][10] Nonetheless, MLM companies function because downline participants are encouraged to hold onto the belief that they can achieve large returns, while the statistical improbability of this is de-emphasized. MLM companies have been made illegal or otherwise strictly regulated in some jurisdictions as merely variations of the traditional pyramid scheme.[11][12]

Terminology

Multi-level marketing is also known as pyramid selling,[2][3] network marketing,[3][1] and referral marketing.[13]

Business model

Setup

 
A typical multi-level marketing MLM binary tree structure. The blue individual will receive compensation from the sales of the downline red members.

Independent non-salaried participants, referred to as distributors (variously called "associates", "independent business owners", "independent agents", etc.), are authorized to distribute the company's products or services. They are awarded their own immediate retail profit from customers plus commission from the company, not downlines, through a multi-level marketing compensation plan, which is based upon the volume of products sold through their own sales efforts as well as that of their downline organization.

Independent distributors develop their organizations by either building an active consumer network, who buy direct from the company, or by recruiting a downline of independent distributors who also build a consumer network base, thereby expanding the overall organization.[citation needed]

The combined number of recruits from these cycles are the sales force which is referred to as the salesperson's "downline". This "downline" is the pyramid in MLM's multiple level structure of compensation.[8]

Participants

The overwhelming majority of MLM participants participate at either an insignificant or nil net profit. A study of 27 MLM schemes found that on average, 99.6% of participants lost money.[14] Indeed, the largest proportion of participants must operate at a net loss (after expenses are deducted) so that the few individuals in the uppermost level of the MLM pyramid can derive their significant earnings. Said earnings are then emphasized by the MLM company to all other participants to encourage their continued participation at a continuing financial loss.[14]

Companies

Many MLM companies generate billions of dollars in annual revenue and hundreds of millions of dollars in annual profit. However, profits accrue to the detriment of the majority of the company's constituent workforce (the MLM participants). Only some of the profits are then shared with individual participants at the top of the MLM distributorship pyramid. The earnings of those top few participants are emphasized and championed at company seminars and conferences, thus creating the illusion that participants in the MLM can become financially successful. This is then advertised by the MLM company to recruit more distributors in the MLM with an unrealistic anticipation of earning margins which are in reality merely theoretical and statistically improbable.[15]

Although an MLM company holds out those few top individual participants as evidence of how participation in the MLM could lead to success, the MLM business model depends on the failure of the overwhelming majority of all other participants, through the injecting of money from their own pockets, so that it can become the revenue and profit of the MLM company, of which the MLM company shares only a small proportion with a few individuals at the top of the MLM participant pyramid. Other than the few at the top, participants provide nothing more than their own financial loss for the company's own profit and the profit of the top few individual participants.[16]

Financial independence

The main sales pitch of MLM companies to their participants and prospective participants is not the MLM company's products or services. The products or services are largely peripheral to the MLM model.[citation needed] Rather, the true sales pitch and emphasis is on a confidence given to participants of potential financial independence through participation in the MLM, luring with phrases like "the lifestyle you deserve" or "independent distributor."[17] Erik German's memoir My Father's Dream documents the author's father's failures through "get-rich-quick schemes" such as Amway.[18] The memoir illustrates the multi-level marketing sales principle known as "selling the dream".[19]

Although the emphasis is always made on the potential of success and the positive life change that "might" or "could" (not "will" or "can") result, disclosure statements include disclaimers that they, as participants, should not rely on the earning results of other participants in the highest levels of the MLM participant pyramid as an indication of what they should expect to earn. MLM companies rarely emphasize the extreme likelihood of failure, or the extreme likelihood of financial loss, from participation in MLM.[citation needed]

Comparisons to pyramid schemes

MLM companies have been made illegal in some jurisdictions as a mere variation of the traditional pyramid scheme, including in China.[11][12] In jurisdictions where MLM companies have not been made illegal, many illegal pyramid schemes attempt to present themselves as MLM businesses.[20] Given that the overwhelming majority of MLM participants cannot realistically make a net profit, let alone a significant net profit, but instead overwhelmingly operate at net losses, some sources have defined all MLM companies as a type of pyramid scheme, even if they have not been made illegal like traditional pyramid schemes through legislative statutes.[13][21][22]

MLM companies are designed to make profit for the owners/shareholders of the company and a few individual participants at the top levels of the MLM pyramid of participants. According to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC), some MLM companies already constitute illegal pyramid schemes even by the narrower existing legislation, exploiting members of the organization.[23]

Lawsuits

Companies that use the MLM business model have been a frequent subject of criticism and lawsuits. Legal claims against MLM companies have included, among other things:

  • Their similarity to traditional illegal pyramid schemes,
  • Price fixing of products or services,
  • Collusion and racketeering in backroom deals where secret compensation packages are created between the MLM company and a few individual participants, to the detriment of others,
  • High initial entry costs (for marketing kit and first products),
  • Emphasis on recruitment of others over actual sales (especially sales to non-participants).
  • Encouraging if not requiring members to purchase and use the company's products,
  • Exploitation of personal relationships as both sales and recruiting targets,
  • Complex and exaggerated compensation schemes,
  • False product claims,
  • The company or leading distributors making major money off participant-attended conventions, training events and materials, advertising materials, and
  • Cult-like techniques which some groups use to enhance their members' enthusiasm and devotion.[13][24]

Direct selling versus network marketing

"Network marketing" and "multi-level marketing" (MLM) have been described by author Dominique Xardel as being synonymous, with it being a type of direct selling.[8] Some sources emphasize that multi-level marketing is merely one form of direct selling, rather than being direct selling.[25][26] Other terms that are sometimes used to describe multi-level marketing include "word-of-mouth marketing", "interactive distribution", and "relationship marketing". Critics have argued that the use of these and other different terms and "buzzwords" is an effort to draw distinctions between multi-level marketing and illegal Ponzi schemes, chain letters, and consumer fraud scams—where none meaningfully exist.[27]

The Direct Selling Association (DSA), a lobbying group for the MLM industry, reported that in 1990 only 25% of DSA members used the MLM business model. By 1999, this had grown to 77.3%.[28] By 2009, 94.2% of DSA members were using MLM, accounting for 99.6% of sellers, and 97.1% of sales.[29] Companies such as Avon, Electrolux, Tupperware, and Kirby were all originally single-level marketing companies, using that traditional and uncontroversial direct selling business model (distinct from MLM) to sell their goods. However, they later introduced multi-level compensation plans, becoming MLM companies.[25] The DSA has approximately 200 members[30] while it is estimated there are over 1,000 firms using multi-level marketing in the United States alone.[31]

History

The origin of multi-level marketing is often disputed, but multi-level marketing style businesses existed in the 1920s[32] and the 1930s, such as the California Vitamin Company[33] (later named Nutrilite) and the California Perfume Company (renamed "Avon Products").[34]

Income levels

Several sources have commented on the income level of specific MLM companies or MLM companies in general:

  • The Times: "The Government investigation claims to have revealed that just 10% of Amway's agents in Britain make any profit, with less than one in ten selling a single item of the group's products."[35]
  • Eric Scheibeler, a high level "Emerald" Amway member: "UK Justice Norris found in 2008 that out of an IBO [Independent Business Owners] population of 33,000, 'only about 90 made sufficient incomes to cover the costs of actively building their business.' That's a 99.7 percent loss rate for investors."[36]
  • Newsweek: based on Mona Vie's own 2007 income disclosure statement "fewer than 1 percent qualified for commissions and of those, only 10 percent made more than $100 a week."[37]
  • Business Students Focus on Ethics: "In the USA, the average annual income from MLM for 90% MLM members is no more than US $5,000, which is far from being a sufficient means of making a living (San Lian Life Weekly 1998)"[38]
  • USA Today has had several articles:
  • "While earning potential varies by company and sales ability, DSA says the median annual income for those in direct sales is $2,400."[39]
  • In an October 15, 2010, article, it was stated that documents of a MLM called Fortune Hi-Tech Marketing reveal that 30 percent of its representatives make no money and that 54 percent of the remaining 70 percent only make $93 a month, before costs. Fortune was under investigation by the Attorneys General of Texas, Kentucky, North Dakota, and North Carolina with Missouri, South Carolina, Illinois, and Florida following up complaints against the company.[40] The FTC eventually stated that Fortune Hi-Tech Marketing was a pyramid scheme and that checks totaling more than $3.7 million were being mailed to the victims.[41]
  • A February 10, 2011, article stated "It can be very difficult, if not impossible, for most individuals to make a lot of money through the direct sale of products to consumers. And big money is what recruiters often allude to in their pitches."[42]
  • "Roland Whitsell, a former business professor who spent 40 years researching and teaching the pitfalls of multilevel marketing": "You'd be hard-pressed to find anyone making over $1.50 an hour, (t)he primary product is opportunity. The strongest, most powerful motivational force today is false hope."[42]
  • Based on the results of a 2018 poll conducted with 1,049 MLM sellers, the majority (60%) earned an average of less than $100 in sales over a five-year period, and 20% never made a single sale. The majority of sellers made less than 70 cents per hour.[43] Nearly 32 percent of those polled acquired credit card debt to finance their MLM involvement.[44]

Legality and legitimacy

Bangladesh

In 2015, the Government of Bangladesh banned all types of domestic and foreign MLM trade in Bangladesh.[45]

China

Multi-level marketing (simplified Chinese: 传销; traditional Chinese: 傳銷; pinyin: chuán xiāo; lit. 'spread selling') was first introduced to mainland China by American, Taiwanese, and Japanese companies following the Chinese economic reform of 1978. This rise in multi-level marketing's popularity coincided with economic uncertainty and a new shift towards individual consumerism. Multi-level marketing was banned on the mainland by the government in 1998, citing social, economic, and taxation issues.[46] Further regulation "Prohibition of Chuanxiao" (where MLM is a type of Chuanxiao was enacted in 2005, clause 3 of Chapter 2 of the regulation states having downlines is illegal).[12] O'Regan wrote 'With this regulation China makes clear that while Direct Sales is permitted in the mainland, Multi-Level Marketing is not'.[11]

MLM companies have been made illegal in China as a mere variation of the traditional pyramid scheme.[11][12] MLM companies have been trying to find ways around China's prohibitions, or have been developing other methods, such as direct sales, to take their products to China through retail operations. The Direct Sales Regulations limit direct selling to cosmetics, health food, sanitary products, bodybuilding equipment and kitchen utensils, and they require Chinese or foreign companies ("FIEs") who intend to engage into direct sale business in mainland China to apply for and obtain direct selling license from the Ministry of Commerce ("MOFCOM").[47] In 2016, there are 73 companies, including domestic and foreign companies, that have obtained the direct selling license.[48] Some multi-level marketing sellers have circumvented this ban by establishing addresses and bank accounts in Hong Kong, where the practice is legal, while selling and recruiting on the mainland.[11][49]

It was not until August 23, 2005, that the State Council promulgated rules that dealt specifically with direct sale operation- Administration of Direct Sales (entered into effect on December 1, 2005) and the Regulations for the Prohibition of Chuanxiao (entered into effect on November 1, 2005). When direct selling is allowed, it will only be permitted under the most stringent requirements, in order to ensure the operations are not pyramid schemes, MLM, or fly-by-night operations.

Saudi Arabia

MLM marketing is banned in Saudi Arabia by imposing religious fatwa nationally, for this reason MLM companies like Amway, Mary Kay, Oriflame and Herbalife sell their products by online selling method instead of MLM.[50]

United States

MLM businesses operate in all 50 U.S. states. Businesses may use terms such as "affiliate marketing" or "home-based business franchising". Some sources say that all MLM companies are essentially pyramid schemes, even if they are legal.[13][21][22]

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) states: "Steer clear of multilevel marketing plans that pay commissions for recruiting new distributors. They're actually illegal pyramid schemes. Why is pyramiding dangerous? Because plans that pay commissions for recruiting new distributors inevitably collapse when no new distributors can be recruited. And when a plan collapses, most people—except perhaps those at the very top of the pyramid—end up empty-handed."[51]

In a 2004 Staff Advisory letter to the Direct Selling Association, the FTC states:

Much has been made of the personal, or internal, consumption issue in recent years. In fact, the amount of internal consumption in any multi-level compensation business does not determine whether or not the FTC will consider the plan a pyramid scheme. The critical question for the FTC is whether the revenues that primarily support the commissions paid to all participants are generated from purchases of goods and services that are not simply incidental to the purchase of the right to participate in a money-making venture.[52]

The Federal Trade Commission warns "Not all multilevel marketing plans are legitimate. Some are pyramid schemes. It's best not to get involved in plans where the money you make is based primarily on the number of distributors you recruit and your sales to them, rather than on your sales to people outside the plan who intend to use the products."[23]

In re Amway Corp. (1979), the Federal Trade Commission indicated that multi-level marketing was not illegal per se in the United States. However, Amway was found guilty of price fixing (by effectively requiring "independent" distributors to sell at the same fixed price) and making exaggerated income claims.[53][54] The FTC advises that multi-level marketing organizations with greater incentives for recruitment than product sales are to be viewed skeptically. The FTC also warns that the practice of getting commissions from recruiting new members is outlawed in most states as "pyramiding".[55]

Walter J. Carl stated in a 2004 Western Journal of Communication article that "MLM organizations have been described by some as cults (Butterfield, 1985),[56] pyramid schemes (Fitzpatrick & Reynolds, 1997),[57] or organizations rife with misleading, deceptive, and unethical behavior (Carter, 1999),[58] such as the questionable use of evangelical discourse to promote the business (Höpfl & Maddrell, 1996),[59] and the exploitation of personal relationships for financial gain (Fitzpatrick & Reynolds, 1997)".[57][60] In China, volunteers working to rescue people from the schemes have been physically attacked.[61]

MLM companies are also criticized for being unable to fulfill their promises for the majority of participants due to basic conflicts with Western cultural norms.[62] There are even claims that the success rate for breaking even or even making money are far worse than other types of businesses:[63] "The vast majority of MLM companies are recruiting MLM companies, in which participants must recruit aggressively to profit. Based on available data from the companies themselves, the loss rate for recruiting MLM companies is approximately 99.9%; i.e., 99.9% of participants lose money after subtracting all expenses, including purchases from the company."[63] (By comparison, skeptic Brian Dunning points out that "only 97.14% of Las Vegas gamblers lose money .... ."[64]) In part, this is because encouraging recruits to further "recruit people to compete with [them]"[13] leads to "market saturation."[24] It has also been claimed "(b)y its very nature, MLM is completely devoid of any scientific foundations."[65]

Because of the encouraging of recruits to further recruit their competitors, some people have even gone so far as to say at best modern MLM companies are nothing more than legalized pyramid schemes[13][21][22] with one stating "Multi-level marketing companies have become an accepted and legally sanctioned form of pyramid scheme in the United States"[21] while another states "Multi-Level Marketing, a form of Pyramid Scheme, is not necessarily fraudulent."[22] In October 2010 it was reported that multi-level marketing companies were being investigated by a number of state attorneys general amid allegations that salespeople were primarily paid for recruiting and that more recent recruits cannot earn anything near what early entrants do.[66] Industry critic Robert L. FitzPatrick has called multi-level marketing "the Main Street bubble" that will eventually burst.[67]

Religious views

Islam

Many Islamic jurists and religious bodies, including Permanent Committee for Scholarly Research and Ifta[68] of Saudi Arabia, have considered MLM trade to be prohibited (haram). They argue that MLM trade involves deceiving others into participating, and the transaction bears resemblance to both riba and gharar.[69][70]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Vander Nat, Peter J.; Keep, William W. (2002). "Marketing Fraud: An Approach for Differentiating Multilevel Marketing from Pyramid Schemes". Journal of Public Policy & Marketing. 21 (1): 139–151. doi:10.1509/jppm.21.1.139.17603. S2CID 154490614.
    Mendelsohn, Martin (2004). The guide to franchising. Cengage Learning Business Press. p. 36. ISBN 1-84480-162-4.
  2. ^ a b Clegg, Brian (2000). The invisible customer: strategies for successive customer service down the wire. Kogan Page. p. 112. ISBN 0-7494-3144-X.
  3. ^ a b c Kitching, Trevor (2001). Purchasing scams and how to avoid them. Gower Publishing Company. p. 4. ISBN 0-566-08281-0.
    Mendelsohn, Martin (2004). The guide to franchising. Cengage Learning Business Press. p. 36. ISBN 1-84480-162-4.
  4. ^ Karp, Gregory (February 10, 2013). . The Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on August 9, 2020.
  5. ^ Karp, Gregory (February 10, 2013). . The Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on August 9, 2020.
  6. ^ "Multilevel Marketing". FTC. May 18, 2021.
    "Multi-Level Marketing Businesses and Pyramid Schemes". FTC, Bureau of Consumer Protection. January 4, 2018. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  7. ^ DuBoff, Leonard D. (2004). The Law (in Plain English) for Small Business. Sphinx Pub. pp. 285–286. ISBN 978-1-57248-377-4.
  8. ^ a b c Xardel, Dominique (1993). The Direct Selling Revolution. Understanding the Growth of the Amway Corporation. Blackwell Publishing. pp. 1–4. ISBN 978-0-631-19229-9.
  9. ^ "The Perils Of Multi-Level Marketing Programs". Texas Public Radio. October 4, 2017. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  10. ^ "Legging company, LuLaRoe accused of misleading consultants". Valley News. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  11. ^ a b c d e O'Regan, Stephen (July 16, 2015). "Multi-Level Marketing: China Isn't Buying It". China Briefing. Dezan Shira & Associates. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  12. ^ a b c d "MLM law of China 'Prohibition of Chuanxiao'". gov.cn. September 3, 2005. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Carroll, Robert Todd (2003). The Skeptic's Dictionary: A Collection of Strange Beliefs, Amusing Deceptions, and Dangerous Delusions. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 235–236. ISBN 0-471-27242-6.
  14. ^ a b Taylor, Jon M. "Public Comments regarding proposed Trade Regulation Rule (16 CFR Part 436)" (PDF). Consumer Awareness Institute.
  15. ^ Chung, Frank (March 1, 2017). "WorldVentures multi-level marketing business claims to have 10,000 Australian members". News.com.au. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  16. ^ Herb, Greenberg (January 17, 2013). "From High Energy Clubs to Dashed Dreams: Herbalife Tales". CNBC. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  17. ^ "Amway: Selling the Dream of Financial Freedom". Knowledge@Wharton. May 5, 2011. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  18. ^ "Lewis: Herbalife selling 'dreams' and 'stories'". The Denver Post. January 8, 2013. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  19. ^ "Selling the American Dream". CNBC. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  20. ^ Valentine, Debra A. (May 13, 1998). "Pyramid Schemes". FTC. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  21. ^ a b c d Coenen, Tracy (2009). Expert Fraud Investigation: A Step-by-Step Guide. Wiley. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-470-38796-2.
  22. ^ a b c d Salinger, Lawrence M., ed. (2005). Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate Crime. Vol. 2. Sage Publishing. p. 880. ISBN 0-7619-3004-3.
  23. ^ a b (PDF). FTC. December 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 20, 2018. Retrieved September 19, 2018. Not all multilevel marketing plans are legitimate. Some are pyramid schemes.
    "Multilevel Marketing". FTC. May 18, 2021.
    "Multilevel Marketing". FTC, Bureau of Consumer Protection. January 4, 2018. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  24. ^ a b "What's Wrong With Multi-Level Marketing?". Vandruff.com. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  25. ^ a b Edwards, Paul; Edwards, Sarah; Economy, Peter (2009). Home-Based Business for Dummies (3rd ed.). Wiley. pp. 38–39. ISBN 978-0-470-53805-0.
  26. ^ "'Person to person' sales plans... "dream" opportunity or business nightmare? [Amway Ad]". Life. Vol. 68, no. 7. February 27, 1970. p. 51.
    Brown, Caryne (December 1992). "Door-to-door Selling Grows Up". Black Enterprise. 23 (5): 76.
  27. ^ Charles W. King; James W. Robinson (2000). The New Professionals. Prima Publishing. p. 80. ISBN 0-7615-1966-1.
  28. ^ Sheffield, Michael L. (February–March 1999). "Comp Plan Conversion:Direct Sales to MLM Compensation Plans". Direct Sales Journal. Retrieved September 19, 2018. (citing Neil Offen, president of the Direct Selling Association)
  29. ^ "US Direct Selling in 2009" (PDF). Direct Selling Association. 2010. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  30. ^ "Direct Selling Organization Membership". Direct Selling Association. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  31. ^ Ziglar, Zig; Hayes, John P. PhD (2001). Network Marketing for Dummies. Hungry Minds. ISBN 0-7645-5292-9.
  32. ^ Pareja, Sergio (2008). "Sales Gone Wild: Will the FTC's Business Opportunity Rule Put an End to Pyramid Marketing Schemes?". McGeorge Law Review. 39 (83).
  33. ^ Attri, Rekha (2011). "A Study of Consumer Perceptions of the Products Sold Through Multilevel Marketing". Management Research Journal. Prabandhan & Taqniki. 39 (83): 97–103.
  34. ^ "MLM History". network-experience.net. January 24, 2014. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  35. ^ Brown, David (November 27, 2007). "Marketing group merely 'selling a dream'". The Times. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  36. ^ Berkowitz, Bill (January 28, 2009). "Republican Benefactor Launches Comeback". Inter press service. Retrieved September 19, 2018. (in reference to BERR vs Amway (Case No:2651, 2652 and 2653 of 2007) in point of objectionability"c")
  37. ^ Dokoupil, Tony (August 2, 2008). "A Drink's Purple Reign". Newsweek. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  38. ^ Ryan, Leo; Wojciech, Gasparski; Georges, Enderle, eds. (2000). Business Students Focus on Ethics (Praxiology): The international Annual of Practical Philosophy and Methodology. Vol. 8. New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. p. 75. ISBN 0-7658-0037-3.
  39. ^ Peterecca, Laura (September 14, 2009). "What kind of business do you want to start?". USA Today. pp. 4B. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  40. ^ O'Donnell, Jayne (October 15, 2010). "Fortune Hi-Tech: American dream or pyramid scheme?". USA Today. pp. 6B. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  41. ^ FTC (November 8, 2016) "FTC Returns More Than $3.7 Million to People Harmed by Pyramid Scheme"
  42. ^ a b O'Donnell, Jayne (February 10, 2011). "Multilevel marketing or 'pyramid?' Sales people find it hard to earn much". USA Today. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  43. ^ Del Valle, Gaby (October 15, 2018). "Multilevel marketing companies say they can make you rich. Here's how much 7 sellers actually earned". Vox. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  44. ^ Singletary, Michelle. "Why multilevel marketing won't make you rich". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 22, 2018.
  45. ^ ফখরুল ইসলাম (Fakhrul Islam) (April 11, 2015). "সব এমএলএম অবৈধ (All MLMs are illegal.)". Prothom Alo. Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  46. ^ Jeffery, Lyn (March 21, 2001). "Placing Practices: Transnational Network Marketing in Mainland China". In Chen, Nancy N. (ed.). China Urban: Ethnographies of Contemporary Culture. Duke University Press. pp. 23–42. ISBN 978-0822326403.
  47. ^ Xu, Lehman Lee. "Chinese Law | China: Direct Sale". www.lehmanlaw.com. Archived from the original on January 21, 2015. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  48. ^ . zxjg.saic.gov.cn. State Administration for Industry and Commerce. Archived from the original on April 28, 2016. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  49. ^ "Hong Kong multi-level marketing plan needs closer look (editorial)". South China Morning Post. October 31, 2013. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  50. ^ Nestorović, Čedomir (2016). Islamic Marketing: Understanding the Socio-Economic, Cultural, and Politico-Legal Environment. Springer. p. 242. ISBN 978-3-319-32754-9. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
  51. ^ "FTC Consumer Alert; Lotions and Potions: The Bottom Line About Multilevel Marketing Plans" (PDF). FTC. January 2000. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  52. ^ Kohm, James A. (January 14, 2004). (PDF). Federal Trade Commission. Archived from the original (reprint) on July 3, 2017.
  53. ^ Eisenberg, Richard (June 1, 1987). "The Mess Called Multi-Level Marketing With celebrities etting the bait, hundreds of pyramid-style sales companies are raking in millions, often taking in the gullible". CNN. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  54. ^ In re Amway Corp., F.T.C. (1979).
  55. ^ "Multilevel Marketing Plans". FTC Consumer Alert. November 1996. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  56. ^ Stephen Butterfield, Amway, the Cult of Free Enterprise (Boston: South End Press, 1985).
  57. ^ a b "FalseProfitsHomePage". Falseprofits.com. Retrieved September 19, 2018.; Robert L. FitzPatrick & Joyce K. Reynolds, False Profits: Seeking Financial and Spiritual Deliverance in Multi-Level Marketing and Pyramid Schemes (Herald Pr, 1997).
  58. ^ Ruth Carter, Amway Motivational Organizations: Behind the Smoke and Mirrors (Winter Park, Fla.: Backstreet Publishing, 1999).
  59. ^ H. Höpfl & J. Maddrell, “Can You Resist a Dream? Evangelical Metaphors and the Appropriation of Emotion”, Metaphor and Organizations, eds. D. Grant & C. Oswick (Thousand Oaks, Cal.: Sage, 1996), 200–212.
  60. ^ Carl, Walter J. (2004). "The Interactional Business of Doing Business: Managing Legitimacy and Co-constructing Entrepreneurial Identities in E-Commerce Multilevel Marketing Discourse". Western Journal of Communication. 68 (1): 92–119. doi:10.1080/10570310409374790. S2CID 151564237.
  61. ^ Hu Yongqi (July 29, 2010). "Going against the slippery slope of a pyramid scheme". China Daily. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  62. ^ Bloch, Brian (1996). "Multilevel marketing: what's the catch?". Journal of Consumer Marketing. 13 (4): 18–26. doi:10.1108/07363769610124519.
  63. ^ a b Taylor, Jon M. (2002). . Consumers Awareness Institute. Archived from the original on August 27, 2018. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
    Cruz, Joan Paola; Camilo, Olaya (2008). "A System Dynamics Model for Studying the Structure of Network Marketing Organizations [Peer reviewed paper that refers uses Taylor as references]" (PDF).[permanent dead link]
  64. ^ Dunning, Brian (October 20, 2009). "Skeptoid #176: Network Marketing". Skeptoid. Retrieved October 24, 2020.
  65. ^ Sandbek, Terry. "Brain Typing: The Pseudoscience of Cold Reading". American Board of Sport Psychology. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  66. ^ "Multilevel marketing or 'pyramid?' Sales people find it hard to earn much". USA Today. February 10, 2011. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  67. ^ Greenberg, Herb (January 9, 2013). "Multi-Level Marketing Critic: Beware 'Main Street Bubble'". CNBC. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  68. ^ "فتوى اللجنة الدائمة بشأن التسويق الشبكي – إسلام ويب – مركز الفتوى". www.islamweb.net (in Arabic). Retrieved July 14, 2020.
  69. ^ Abdul-Rahman, Muhammad Saed (2004). Islam: Questions and Answers – Jurisprudence and Islamic Rulings: Transactions – Part 7. MSA Publication Limited. ISBN 978-1-86179-461-1. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  70. ^ Manjur Elahi, Muhammad; Tajul Islam, Muhammad; Muhammad Zakaria, Abu Bakr (May 18, 2011). "The provisions of network marketing in Islamic jurisprudence – Bengali – Muhammad Manjur Elahi". IslamHouse.com (in Bengali). Retrieved June 8, 2020.

External links

multi, level, marketing, also, called, network, marketing, pyramid, selling, controversial, marketing, strategy, sale, products, services, which, revenue, company, derived, from, salaried, workforce, selling, company, products, services, while, earnings, parti. Multi level marketing MLM also called network marketing 1 or pyramid selling 2 3 4 is a controversial 5 marketing strategy for the sale of products or services in which the revenue of the MLM company is derived from a non salaried workforce selling the company s products or services while the earnings of the participants are derived from a pyramid shaped or binary compensation commission system 6 In multi level marketing the compensation plan usually pays out to participants from two potential revenue streams The first is based on a sales commission from directly selling the product or service the second is paid out from commissions based upon the wholesale purchases made by other sellers whom the participant has recruited to also sell product In the organizational hierarchy of MLM companies recruited participants as well as those whom the recruit recruits are referred to as one s downline distributors 7 MLM salespeople are therefore expected to sell products directly to end user retail consumers by means of relationship referrals and word of mouth marketing but more importantly they are incentivized to recruit others to join the company s distribution chain as fellow salespeople so that these can become downline distributors 1 8 According to a report that studied the business models of 350 MLM companies in the United States published on the Federal Trade Commission s website at least 99 of people who join MLM companies lose money 9 10 Nonetheless MLM companies function because downline participants are encouraged to hold onto the belief that they can achieve large returns while the statistical improbability of this is de emphasized MLM companies have been made illegal or otherwise strictly regulated in some jurisdictions as merely variations of the traditional pyramid scheme 11 12 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Business model 2 1 Setup 2 2 Participants 2 3 Companies 2 4 Financial independence 3 Comparisons to pyramid schemes 3 1 Lawsuits 4 Direct selling versus network marketing 5 History 6 Income levels 7 Legality and legitimacy 7 1 Bangladesh 7 2 China 7 3 Saudi Arabia 7 4 United States 8 Religious views 8 1 Islam 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksTerminologyMulti level marketing is also known as pyramid selling 2 3 network marketing 3 1 and referral marketing 13 Business modelSetup A typical multi level marketing MLM binary tree structure The blue individual will receive compensation from the sales of the downline red members Independent non salaried participants referred to as distributors variously called associates independent business owners independent agents etc are authorized to distribute the company s products or services They are awarded their own immediate retail profit from customers plus commission from the company not downlines through a multi level marketing compensation plan which is based upon the volume of products sold through their own sales efforts as well as that of their downline organization Independent distributors develop their organizations by either building an active consumer network who buy direct from the company or by recruiting a downline of independent distributors who also build a consumer network base thereby expanding the overall organization citation needed The combined number of recruits from these cycles are the sales force which is referred to as the salesperson s downline This downline is the pyramid in MLM s multiple level structure of compensation 8 Participants The overwhelming majority of MLM participants participate at either an insignificant or nil net profit A study of 27 MLM schemes found that on average 99 6 of participants lost money 14 Indeed the largest proportion of participants must operate at a net loss after expenses are deducted so that the few individuals in the uppermost level of the MLM pyramid can derive their significant earnings Said earnings are then emphasized by the MLM company to all other participants to encourage their continued participation at a continuing financial loss 14 Companies Many MLM companies generate billions of dollars in annual revenue and hundreds of millions of dollars in annual profit However profits accrue to the detriment of the majority of the company s constituent workforce the MLM participants Only some of the profits are then shared with individual participants at the top of the MLM distributorship pyramid The earnings of those top few participants are emphasized and championed at company seminars and conferences thus creating the illusion that participants in the MLM can become financially successful This is then advertised by the MLM company to recruit more distributors in the MLM with an unrealistic anticipation of earning margins which are in reality merely theoretical and statistically improbable 15 Although an MLM company holds out those few top individual participants as evidence of how participation in the MLM could lead to success the MLM business model depends on the failure of the overwhelming majority of all other participants through the injecting of money from their own pockets so that it can become the revenue and profit of the MLM company of which the MLM company shares only a small proportion with a few individuals at the top of the MLM participant pyramid Other than the few at the top participants provide nothing more than their own financial loss for the company s own profit and the profit of the top few individual participants 16 Financial independence The main sales pitch of MLM companies to their participants and prospective participants is not the MLM company s products or services The products or services are largely peripheral to the MLM model citation needed Rather the true sales pitch and emphasis is on a confidence given to participants of potential financial independence through participation in the MLM luring with phrases like the lifestyle you deserve or independent distributor 17 Erik German s memoir My Father s Dream documents the author s father s failures through get rich quick schemes such as Amway 18 The memoir illustrates the multi level marketing sales principle known as selling the dream 19 Although the emphasis is always made on the potential of success and the positive life change that might or could not will or can result disclosure statements include disclaimers that they as participants should not rely on the earning results of other participants in the highest levels of the MLM participant pyramid as an indication of what they should expect to earn MLM companies rarely emphasize the extreme likelihood of failure or the extreme likelihood of financial loss from participation in MLM citation needed Comparisons to pyramid schemesMLM companies have been made illegal in some jurisdictions as a mere variation of the traditional pyramid scheme including in China 11 12 In jurisdictions where MLM companies have not been made illegal many illegal pyramid schemes attempt to present themselves as MLM businesses 20 Given that the overwhelming majority of MLM participants cannot realistically make a net profit let alone a significant net profit but instead overwhelmingly operate at net losses some sources have defined all MLM companies as a type of pyramid scheme even if they have not been made illegal like traditional pyramid schemes through legislative statutes 13 21 22 MLM companies are designed to make profit for the owners shareholders of the company and a few individual participants at the top levels of the MLM pyramid of participants According to the U S Federal Trade Commission FTC some MLM companies already constitute illegal pyramid schemes even by the narrower existing legislation exploiting members of the organization 23 Lawsuits This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available December 2021 Companies that use the MLM business model have been a frequent subject of criticism and lawsuits Legal claims against MLM companies have included among other things Their similarity to traditional illegal pyramid schemes Price fixing of products or services Collusion and racketeering in backroom deals where secret compensation packages are created between the MLM company and a few individual participants to the detriment of others High initial entry costs for marketing kit and first products Emphasis on recruitment of others over actual sales especially sales to non participants Encouraging if not requiring members to purchase and use the company s products Exploitation of personal relationships as both sales and recruiting targets Complex and exaggerated compensation schemes False product claims The company or leading distributors making major money off participant attended conventions training events and materials advertising materials and Cult like techniques which some groups use to enhance their members enthusiasm and devotion 13 24 Direct selling versus network marketing Network marketing and multi level marketing MLM have been described by author Dominique Xardel as being synonymous with it being a type of direct selling 8 Some sources emphasize that multi level marketing is merely one form of direct selling rather than being direct selling 25 26 Other terms that are sometimes used to describe multi level marketing include word of mouth marketing interactive distribution and relationship marketing Critics have argued that the use of these and other different terms and buzzwords is an effort to draw distinctions between multi level marketing and illegal Ponzi schemes chain letters and consumer fraud scams where none meaningfully exist 27 The Direct Selling Association DSA a lobbying group for the MLM industry reported that in 1990 only 25 of DSA members used the MLM business model By 1999 this had grown to 77 3 28 By 2009 94 2 of DSA members were using MLM accounting for 99 6 of sellers and 97 1 of sales 29 Companies such as Avon Electrolux Tupperware and Kirby were all originally single level marketing companies using that traditional and uncontroversial direct selling business model distinct from MLM to sell their goods However they later introduced multi level compensation plans becoming MLM companies 25 The DSA has approximately 200 members 30 while it is estimated there are over 1 000 firms using multi level marketing in the United States alone 31 HistoryThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2020 The origin of multi level marketing is often disputed but multi level marketing style businesses existed in the 1920s 32 and the 1930s such as the California Vitamin Company 33 later named Nutrilite and the California Perfume Company renamed Avon Products 34 Income levelsThis section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available April 2021 Several sources have commented on the income level of specific MLM companies or MLM companies in general The Times The Government investigation claims to have revealed that just 10 of Amway s agents in Britain make any profit with less than one in ten selling a single item of the group s products 35 Eric Scheibeler a high level Emerald Amway member UK Justice Norris found in 2008 that out of an IBO Independent Business Owners population of 33 000 only about 90 made sufficient incomes to cover the costs of actively building their business That s a 99 7 percent loss rate for investors 36 Newsweek based on Mona Vie s own 2007 income disclosure statement fewer than 1 percent qualified for commissions and of those only 10 percent made more than 100 a week 37 Business Students Focus on Ethics In the USA the average annual income from MLM for 90 MLM members is no more than US 5 000 which is far from being a sufficient means of making a living San Lian Life Weekly 1998 38 USA Today has had several articles While earning potential varies by company and sales ability DSA says the median annual income for those in direct sales is 2 400 39 In an October 15 2010 article it was stated that documents of a MLM called Fortune Hi Tech Marketing reveal that 30 percent of its representatives make no money and that 54 percent of the remaining 70 percent only make 93 a month before costs Fortune was under investigation by the Attorneys General of Texas Kentucky North Dakota and North Carolina with Missouri South Carolina Illinois and Florida following up complaints against the company 40 The FTC eventually stated that Fortune Hi Tech Marketing was a pyramid scheme and that checks totaling more than 3 7 million were being mailed to the victims 41 A February 10 2011 article stated It can be very difficult if not impossible for most individuals to make a lot of money through the direct sale of products to consumers And big money is what recruiters often allude to in their pitches 42 Roland Whitsell a former business professor who spent 40 years researching and teaching the pitfalls of multilevel marketing You d be hard pressed to find anyone making over 1 50 an hour t he primary product is opportunity The strongest most powerful motivational force today is false hope 42 Based on the results of a 2018 poll conducted with 1 049 MLM sellers the majority 60 earned an average of less than 100 in sales over a five year period and 20 never made a single sale The majority of sellers made less than 70 cents per hour 43 Nearly 32 percent of those polled acquired credit card debt to finance their MLM involvement 44 Legality and legitimacyBangladesh In 2015 the Government of Bangladesh banned all types of domestic and foreign MLM trade in Bangladesh 45 China Multi level marketing simplified Chinese 传销 traditional Chinese 傳銷 pinyin chuan xiao lit spread selling was first introduced to mainland China by American Taiwanese and Japanese companies following the Chinese economic reform of 1978 This rise in multi level marketing s popularity coincided with economic uncertainty and a new shift towards individual consumerism Multi level marketing was banned on the mainland by the government in 1998 citing social economic and taxation issues 46 Further regulation Prohibition of Chuanxiao where MLM is a type of Chuanxiao was enacted in 2005 clause 3 of Chapter 2 of the regulation states having downlines is illegal 12 O Regan wrote With this regulation China makes clear that while Direct Sales is permitted in the mainland Multi Level Marketing is not 11 MLM companies have been made illegal in China as a mere variation of the traditional pyramid scheme 11 12 MLM companies have been trying to find ways around China s prohibitions or have been developing other methods such as direct sales to take their products to China through retail operations The Direct Sales Regulations limit direct selling to cosmetics health food sanitary products bodybuilding equipment and kitchen utensils and they require Chinese or foreign companies FIEs who intend to engage into direct sale business in mainland China to apply for and obtain direct selling license from the Ministry of Commerce MOFCOM 47 In 2016 there are 73 companies including domestic and foreign companies that have obtained the direct selling license 48 Some multi level marketing sellers have circumvented this ban by establishing addresses and bank accounts in Hong Kong where the practice is legal while selling and recruiting on the mainland 11 49 It was not until August 23 2005 that the State Council promulgated rules that dealt specifically with direct sale operation Administration of Direct Sales entered into effect on December 1 2005 and the Regulations for the Prohibition of Chuanxiao entered into effect on November 1 2005 When direct selling is allowed it will only be permitted under the most stringent requirements in order to ensure the operations are not pyramid schemes MLM or fly by night operations Saudi Arabia MLM marketing is banned in Saudi Arabia by imposing religious fatwa nationally for this reason MLM companies like Amway Mary Kay Oriflame and Herbalife sell their products by online selling method instead of MLM 50 United States MLM businesses operate in all 50 U S states Businesses may use terms such as affiliate marketing or home based business franchising Some sources say that all MLM companies are essentially pyramid schemes even if they are legal 13 21 22 The U S Federal Trade Commission FTC states Steer clear of multilevel marketing plans that pay commissions for recruiting new distributors They re actually illegal pyramid schemes Why is pyramiding dangerous Because plans that pay commissions for recruiting new distributors inevitably collapse when no new distributors can be recruited And when a plan collapses most people except perhaps those at the very top of the pyramid end up empty handed 51 In a 2004 Staff Advisory letter to the Direct Selling Association the FTC states Much has been made of the personal or internal consumption issue in recent years In fact the amount of internal consumption in any multi level compensation business does not determine whether or not the FTC will consider the plan a pyramid scheme The critical question for the FTC is whether the revenues that primarily support the commissions paid to all participants are generated from purchases of goods and services that are not simply incidental to the purchase of the right to participate in a money making venture 52 The Federal Trade Commission warns Not all multilevel marketing plans are legitimate Some are pyramid schemes It s best not to get involved in plans where the money you make is based primarily on the number of distributors you recruit and your sales to them rather than on your sales to people outside the plan who intend to use the products 23 In re Amway Corp 1979 the Federal Trade Commission indicated that multi level marketing was not illegal per se in the United States However Amway was found guilty of price fixing by effectively requiring independent distributors to sell at the same fixed price and making exaggerated income claims 53 54 The FTC advises that multi level marketing organizations with greater incentives for recruitment than product sales are to be viewed skeptically The FTC also warns that the practice of getting commissions from recruiting new members is outlawed in most states as pyramiding 55 Walter J Carl stated in a 2004 Western Journal of Communication article that MLM organizations have been described by some as cults Butterfield 1985 56 pyramid schemes Fitzpatrick amp Reynolds 1997 57 or organizations rife with misleading deceptive and unethical behavior Carter 1999 58 such as the questionable use of evangelical discourse to promote the business Hopfl amp Maddrell 1996 59 and the exploitation of personal relationships for financial gain Fitzpatrick amp Reynolds 1997 57 60 In China volunteers working to rescue people from the schemes have been physically attacked 61 MLM companies are also criticized for being unable to fulfill their promises for the majority of participants due to basic conflicts with Western cultural norms 62 There are even claims that the success rate for breaking even or even making money are far worse than other types of businesses 63 The vast majority of MLM companies are recruiting MLM companies in which participants must recruit aggressively to profit Based on available data from the companies themselves the loss rate for recruiting MLM companies is approximately 99 9 i e 99 9 of participants lose money after subtracting all expenses including purchases from the company 63 By comparison skeptic Brian Dunning points out that only 97 14 of Las Vegas gamblers lose money 64 In part this is because encouraging recruits to further recruit people to compete with them 13 leads to market saturation 24 It has also been claimed b y its very nature MLM is completely devoid of any scientific foundations 65 Because of the encouraging of recruits to further recruit their competitors some people have even gone so far as to say at best modern MLM companies are nothing more than legalized pyramid schemes 13 21 22 with one stating Multi level marketing companies have become an accepted and legally sanctioned form of pyramid scheme in the United States 21 while another states Multi Level Marketing a form of Pyramid Scheme is not necessarily fraudulent 22 In October 2010 it was reported that multi level marketing companies were being investigated by a number of state attorneys general amid allegations that salespeople were primarily paid for recruiting and that more recent recruits cannot earn anything near what early entrants do 66 Industry critic Robert L FitzPatrick has called multi level marketing the Main Street bubble that will eventually burst 67 Religious viewsIslam Many Islamic jurists and religious bodies including Permanent Committee for Scholarly Research and Ifta 68 of Saudi Arabia have considered MLM trade to be prohibited haram They argue that MLM trade involves deceiving others into participating and the transaction bears resemblance to both riba and gharar 69 70 See alsoBinary option Destiny Group List of multi level marketing companies Saradha Group financial scandal TiensReferences a b c Vander Nat Peter J Keep William W 2002 Marketing Fraud An Approach for Differentiating Multilevel Marketing from Pyramid Schemes Journal of Public Policy amp Marketing 21 1 139 151 doi 10 1509 jppm 21 1 139 17603 S2CID 154490614 Mendelsohn Martin 2004 The guide to franchising Cengage Learning Business Press p 36 ISBN 1 84480 162 4 a b Clegg Brian 2000 The invisible customer strategies for successive customer service down the wire Kogan Page p 112 ISBN 0 7494 3144 X a b c Kitching Trevor 2001 Purchasing scams and how to avoid them Gower Publishing Company p 4 ISBN 0 566 08281 0 Mendelsohn Martin 2004 The guide to franchising Cengage Learning Business Press p 36 ISBN 1 84480 162 4 Karp Gregory February 10 2013 The fine line between legitimate businesses and pyramid schemes The Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on August 9 2020 Karp Gregory February 10 2013 The fine line between legitimate businesses and pyramid schemes The Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on August 9 2020 Multilevel Marketing FTC May 18 2021 Multi Level Marketing Businesses and Pyramid Schemes FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection January 4 2018 Retrieved October 16 2020 DuBoff Leonard D 2004 The Law in Plain English for Small Business Sphinx Pub pp 285 286 ISBN 978 1 57248 377 4 a b c Xardel Dominique 1993 The Direct Selling Revolution Understanding the Growth of the Amway Corporation Blackwell Publishing pp 1 4 ISBN 978 0 631 19229 9 The Perils Of Multi Level Marketing Programs Texas Public Radio October 4 2017 Retrieved February 16 2018 Legging company LuLaRoe accused of misleading consultants Valley News Retrieved February 16 2018 a b c d e O Regan Stephen July 16 2015 Multi Level Marketing China Isn t Buying It China Briefing Dezan Shira amp Associates Retrieved September 19 2018 a b c d MLM law of China Prohibition of Chuanxiao gov cn September 3 2005 Retrieved September 19 2018 a b c d e f Carroll Robert Todd 2003 The Skeptic s Dictionary A Collection of Strange Beliefs Amusing Deceptions and Dangerous Delusions John Wiley amp Sons pp 235 236 ISBN 0 471 27242 6 a b Taylor Jon M Public Comments regarding proposed Trade Regulation Rule 16 CFR Part 436 PDF Consumer Awareness Institute Chung Frank March 1 2017 WorldVentures multi level marketing business claims to have 10 000 Australian members News com au Retrieved September 19 2018 Herb Greenberg January 17 2013 From High Energy Clubs to Dashed Dreams Herbalife Tales CNBC Retrieved September 19 2018 Amway Selling the Dream of Financial Freedom Knowledge Wharton May 5 2011 Retrieved September 19 2018 Lewis Herbalife selling dreams and stories The Denver Post January 8 2013 Retrieved September 19 2018 Selling the American Dream CNBC Retrieved September 19 2018 Valentine Debra A May 13 1998 Pyramid Schemes FTC Retrieved September 19 2018 a b c d Coenen Tracy 2009 Expert Fraud Investigation A Step by Step Guide Wiley p 168 ISBN 978 0 470 38796 2 a b c d Salinger Lawrence M ed 2005 Encyclopedia of White Collar amp Corporate Crime Vol 2 Sage Publishing p 880 ISBN 0 7619 3004 3 a b The Bottom Line About Multilevel Marketing Plans and Pyramid Schemes PDF FTC December 2012 Archived from the original PDF on September 20 2018 Retrieved September 19 2018 Not all multilevel marketing plans are legitimate Some are pyramid schemes Multilevel Marketing FTC May 18 2021 Multilevel Marketing FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection January 4 2018 Retrieved September 19 2018 a b What s Wrong With Multi Level Marketing Vandruff com Retrieved September 19 2018 a b Edwards Paul Edwards Sarah Economy Peter 2009 Home Based Business for Dummies 3rd ed Wiley pp 38 39 ISBN 978 0 470 53805 0 Person to person sales plans dream opportunity or business nightmare Amway Ad Life Vol 68 no 7 February 27 1970 p 51 Brown Caryne December 1992 Door to door Selling Grows Up Black Enterprise 23 5 76 Charles W King James W Robinson 2000 The New Professionals Prima Publishing p 80 ISBN 0 7615 1966 1 Sheffield Michael L February March 1999 Comp Plan Conversion Direct Sales to MLM Compensation Plans Direct Sales Journal Retrieved September 19 2018 citing Neil Offen president of the Direct Selling Association US Direct Selling in 2009 PDF Direct Selling Association 2010 Retrieved September 19 2018 Direct Selling Organization Membership Direct Selling Association Retrieved September 19 2018 Ziglar Zig Hayes John P PhD 2001 Network Marketing for Dummies Hungry Minds ISBN 0 7645 5292 9 Pareja Sergio 2008 Sales Gone Wild Will the FTC s Business Opportunity Rule Put an End to Pyramid Marketing Schemes McGeorge Law Review 39 83 Attri Rekha 2011 A Study of Consumer Perceptions of the Products Sold Through Multilevel Marketing Management Research Journal Prabandhan amp Taqniki 39 83 97 103 MLM History network experience net January 24 2014 Retrieved September 19 2018 Brown David November 27 2007 Marketing group merely selling a dream The Times Retrieved September 19 2018 Berkowitz Bill January 28 2009 Republican Benefactor Launches Comeback Inter press service Retrieved September 19 2018 in reference to BERR vs Amway Case No 2651 2652 and 2653 of 2007 in point of objectionability c Dokoupil Tony August 2 2008 A Drink s Purple Reign Newsweek Retrieved September 19 2018 Ryan Leo Wojciech Gasparski Georges Enderle eds 2000 Business Students Focus on Ethics Praxiology The international Annual of Practical Philosophy and Methodology Vol 8 New Jersey Transaction Publishers p 75 ISBN 0 7658 0037 3 Peterecca Laura September 14 2009 What kind of business do you want to start USA Today pp 4B Retrieved September 19 2018 O Donnell Jayne October 15 2010 Fortune Hi Tech American dream or pyramid scheme USA Today pp 6B Retrieved September 19 2018 FTC November 8 2016 FTC Returns More Than 3 7 Million to People Harmed by Pyramid Scheme a b O Donnell Jayne February 10 2011 Multilevel marketing or pyramid Sales people find it hard to earn much USA Today Retrieved September 19 2018 Del Valle Gaby October 15 2018 Multilevel marketing companies say they can make you rich Here s how much 7 sellers actually earned Vox Retrieved October 15 2018 Singletary Michelle Why multilevel marketing won t make you rich The Washington Post Retrieved October 22 2018 ফখর ল ইসল ম Fakhrul Islam April 11 2015 সব এমএলএম অব ধ All MLMs are illegal Prothom Alo Retrieved May 29 2020 Jeffery Lyn March 21 2001 Placing Practices Transnational Network Marketing in Mainland China In Chen Nancy N ed China Urban Ethnographies of Contemporary Culture Duke University Press pp 23 42 ISBN 978 0822326403 Xu Lehman Lee Chinese Law China Direct Sale www lehmanlaw com Archived from the original on January 21 2015 Retrieved September 19 2018 直销企业信息披露网站 zxjg saic gov cn State Administration for Industry and Commerce Archived from the original on April 28 2016 Retrieved September 19 2018 Hong Kong multi level marketing plan needs closer look editorial South China Morning Post October 31 2013 Retrieved September 19 2018 Nestorovic Cedomir 2016 Islamic Marketing Understanding the Socio Economic Cultural and Politico Legal Environment Springer p 242 ISBN 978 3 319 32754 9 Retrieved June 20 2020 FTC Consumer Alert Lotions and Potions The Bottom Line About Multilevel Marketing Plans PDF FTC January 2000 Retrieved September 19 2018 Kohm James A January 14 2004 RE Staff Advisory Opinion Pyramid Scheme Analysis PDF Federal Trade Commission Archived from the original reprint on July 3 2017 Eisenberg Richard June 1 1987 The Mess Called Multi Level Marketing With celebrities etting the bait hundreds of pyramid style sales companies are raking in millions often taking in the gullible CNN Retrieved September 19 2018 In re Amway Corp F T C 1979 Multilevel Marketing Plans FTC Consumer Alert November 1996 Retrieved September 19 2018 Stephen Butterfield Amway the Cult of Free Enterprise Boston South End Press 1985 a b FalseProfitsHomePage Falseprofits com Retrieved September 19 2018 Robert L FitzPatrick amp Joyce K Reynolds False Profits Seeking Financial and Spiritual Deliverance in Multi Level Marketing and Pyramid Schemes Herald Pr 1997 Ruth Carter Amway Motivational Organizations Behind the Smoke and Mirrors Winter Park Fla Backstreet Publishing 1999 H Hopfl amp J Maddrell Can You Resist a Dream Evangelical Metaphors and the Appropriation of Emotion Metaphor and Organizations eds D Grant amp C Oswick Thousand Oaks Cal Sage 1996 200 212 Carl Walter J 2004 The Interactional Business of Doing Business Managing Legitimacy and Co constructing Entrepreneurial Identities in E Commerce Multilevel Marketing Discourse Western Journal of Communication 68 1 92 119 doi 10 1080 10570310409374790 S2CID 151564237 Hu Yongqi July 29 2010 Going against the slippery slope of a pyramid scheme China Daily Retrieved September 19 2018 Bloch Brian 1996 Multilevel marketing what s the catch Journal of Consumer Marketing 13 4 18 26 doi 10 1108 07363769610124519 a b Taylor Jon M 2002 Comparing Recruiting MLMs with No product Pyramid Schemes and with Gambling Consumers Awareness Institute Archived from the original on August 27 2018 Retrieved October 15 2018 Cruz Joan Paola Camilo Olaya 2008 A System Dynamics Model for Studying the Structure of Network Marketing Organizations Peer reviewed paper that refers uses Taylor as references PDF permanent dead link Dunning Brian October 20 2009 Skeptoid 176 Network Marketing Skeptoid Retrieved October 24 2020 Sandbek Terry Brain Typing The Pseudoscience of Cold Reading American Board of Sport Psychology Retrieved September 19 2018 Multilevel marketing or pyramid Sales people find it hard to earn much USA Today February 10 2011 Retrieved September 19 2018 Greenberg Herb January 9 2013 Multi Level Marketing Critic Beware Main Street Bubble CNBC Retrieved September 19 2018 فتوى اللجنة الدائمة بشأن التسويق الشبكي إسلام ويب مركز الفتوى www islamweb net in Arabic Retrieved July 14 2020 Abdul Rahman Muhammad Saed 2004 Islam Questions and Answers Jurisprudence and Islamic Rulings Transactions Part 7 MSA Publication Limited ISBN 978 1 86179 461 1 Retrieved June 8 2020 Manjur Elahi Muhammad Tajul Islam Muhammad Muhammad Zakaria Abu Bakr May 18 2011 The provisions of network marketing in Islamic jurisprudence Bengali Muhammad Manjur Elahi IslamHouse com in Bengali Retrieved June 8 2020 External linksFederal Trade Commission article Archived January 18 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Multi level marketing amp oldid 1130733715, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.