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Scam Absurdities: A Leopard Can't Change His Spots, A Scammer Can't Change His Ways

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It is sometimes painfully obvious why would any one fall for a particular scheme, when all you need to do is look at the people involved in the scheme, and what were they doing before the scheme. Were they involved in scams? And if so, in what role? With power of Google and a few minutes on a computer, you can find a lot of information that can only save you from possible crooks.

Recently, TelexFree's "International Marketing Director" Steve Labriola released some sort of a video assuring there is no US investigation (that he knows about). About 3 minute in, there's this some sort of "assured revenue" thing:


In other words, you pay TelexFree, then you pay LifeRevs to do some work for you, and TelexFree will pay you big bucks. Pay in 15125, plus $924, and you get back 57200, and they even said it's "income claims", something that is very much verboten in the MLM industry.

But who runs LifeRevs? And this AdAssureLite? Turns out, it's related to Zeek Rewards ponzi.




Searching Who.is for domain name adassureLite brought me to GoDaddy's WHOIS, which yielded
Admin Name: Gary Harrison
Admin Organization: SAIBR
Admin Street: 5208 South 3615 West
Admin City: Taylorsville
Admin State/Province: Utah
Admin Postal Code: 84129
Admin Country: United States
Admin Phone: +1.4045675770
Admin Phone Ext:
Admin Fax:
Admin Fax Ext:
Admin Email: daniel@liferevs.com

The guy's name's Gary, but the email address goes to Daniel? Hmmmm... Well, at least the company fits... It is LifeRevs, after all.

Searching Google for the email address yielded... Linked in Profile, that he worked with Zeek Rewards.


Used to work with Zeek Rewards ponzi, eh? Let's see what Google says about "liferevs Zeek"? That LifeRevs launched an "ad posting service" for Zeek on June 28th, less than 2 months before Feds shut down Zeek Rewards.


And now they are launching the same service for TelexFree.

In other words, this guy basically confirmed that TelexFree is a ponzi scheme... just like Zeek Rewards.

Oh, and Dan? Maybe you should stick to your day job at SAIBR / ExchangeCloud.

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BREAKING NEWS: NuSkin in Serious Legal Trouble in China

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NUSKIN 2008 _1280x1024.jpg
NUSKIN logo (Photo credit: Ellery Chen)
China usually don't advertise internal troubles, except when they are about to make an example of somebody. So when NuSkin was mentioned on People's Daily, the official newspaper of the government, people really noticed. And it's NOT in a good way. 

Just reading this paragraph from Xinhua (Chinese official press agency) is enough to send NuSkin stock price in the US plummet 30%. 
BEIJING, Jan. 16 (Xinhua) -- Local authorities have been told to investigate media reports that allege Nu Skin distributes false information and conducts illegal business in China, the country's State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) said Thursday.
The "media reports" in China had been posted in June or July 2013, as had continued research from Citron Research, since 2012! [Link 1]  [Link 2]

if you wish to do your own research, what you need to know is reports are in Chinese, so you will need to search with the Chinese name: 如新

When China represents 30% of the company's revenue, and sales had SHRUNK in the rest of the world vs. China, this is going to be a MAJOR blow to NuSkin, whether the reports are 100% true or not. And there's no doubt there is *some* truth to the media reports, esp. when it came from widely different sources, in different parts of the country, and even Citron's own investigative report.

But what's REALLY disturbing is the cult-brainwashing.




Remember the Chinese name of NuSkin,  如新

What you don't know is the type of slogan they are using to brainwash new recruits, one of which is:

用如新的产品能去新世界、不用就是不相信善的力量

Use NuSkin Product can go to New World, Not Use is Not Believe in Force of Compassion

(source: http://www.azhixiao.com/cxzh/pj/68718.html  Chinese language)

By attaching themselves to "Compassion", NuSkin basically is operating as a CULT in China. And guess  who's the OTHER cult that flies the banner of compassion in China? You guessed it... Falun Gong.  From Wikipedia...
Falun Gong or Falun Dafa (literally means "Dharma Wheel Practice" or "Law Wheel Practice") is a spiritual discipline first introduced in China in 1992 through public lectures by its founder, Li Hongzhi. It combines the practice of meditation and slow-moving qigong exercises with a moral philosophy. Falun Gong emphasizes morality and the cultivation of virtue in its central tenets of Truthfulness, Compassion, and Forbearance (Chinese: 真、善、忍), and identifies as a qigong practice of the Buddhist school, though its teachings also incorporate elements drawn from Taoist traditions. 
Yep, there's "Compassion" or 善

Falun Gong was violently suppressed in China as a cult. NuSkin is basically operating as Falun Gong junior, but pushing products instead of religion.

NuSkin needs to wake up and realize what sort of of a mess it is in... Or it will not survive the experience.

In the meanwhile, you really should go read the Citron Research report yourself.


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MLM Dictionary: Amway Safeguard Rules

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English: Honda- Amway(AVCL)Hồ Chí Minh
English: Honda- Amway(AVCL)Hồ Chí Minh (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Amway Safeguard Rules represents a set of "rules" (actually concessions) implemented by Amway when it was sued by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in 1975. With the reform of the compensation plan where the IBOs (independent business owners, i.e. sales affiliates) are only paid for what they sell and what their downlines well, and the provisions in these rules, FTC reluctantly agreed that Amway does NOT fit the Koscot test for pyramid scheme. This was finalized in 1979, and became the basis for the entire "multi-level marketing" industry.

In the successful 1975 FTC prosecution of "Koscot Interplanetary" and earlier prosecution of "Dare to be Great", FTC specified the four specific problems they have with the pyramid scheme:

  • a) Large membership fees (Dare to be Great can cost up to $2000 or more in 1970's!)
  • b) Front-end loading (buying a huge "starter kit") and inventory loading (buying so much inventory just so your upline can get the commission)
  • c) Programs in which distributors were misled as to the amount of commission they might reasonably earn (misleading income claims), and
  • d) Programs in which commissions were not based on the sale of product to the ultimate consumers. (no true retail customer means it's a money circulation game)

SEC had also previously joined in the prosecution of "Dare to be Great" in 1973, as it considered a pyramid scheme similar to a ponzi scheme...  you put in money, and you expect to get more out of it with rather minimal effort, via the rule known as the "Howey Test".

In fact, many states as well as the US Postal Service have also joined in the prosecution of misleading direct sales, esp. those sent through the mail. Some argued that this patchwork of regulations, different from state to state, created such a hostile atmosphere for direct sales that it would have perished...

An infamous player of this era is called Cambridge Plan International, founded by Jack and Eileen Feather. Some of their most infamous products are "Mark Eden Bust Developer" (diet supplement to make women's boobs bigger), "Astro-Trimmer" (diet supplement that shrinks your tummy fat), and their namesake, the "Cambridge Diet", powdered drinks, soup, and such, only 350 calories, developed by Cambridge professor!  Cambridge eventually went bust when it tried to shift from mail order model (prosecuted multiple times for mail fraud) to direct sales, then the direct sales went bubble and burst. It started with 25 reps in 1981, to 150000 reps in 1982...  and declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1983.

Direct sales basically would not have survived had Amway not survived the FTC lawsuit, and it did not survive unscaped. The ruling, 1979 FTC vs. Amway, resulting in a consent decree where the company agreed to several fundamental changes, that became known as the "Amway Safeguard Rules". (Incidentally, Amway also agreed to tone down income claims, and agree not to restrict the power of affiliates to set prices, i.e. price-fixing).

So what are the Amway safeguard rules? It's quite simple... 3 simple steps.



Amway Safeguard Rules, i.e. "Amway Rules" have 3 rules

1) "Ten Retail Sales Rule" -- if you don't make ten sales to ten separate people, you are NOT qualified to earn any downline commissions.

2) "70% rule" -- You have to sell 70% of what you previously ordered before you are allowed to re-order.

3) "Buyback policy" -- Amway will buyback any inventory you want to return within 6 months, at 90% or higher of the price you paid.

Amway have also adopted the compensation plan where there is NO bonus for recruiting additional IBOs. Only sales (by you, or your downlines) will be compensated through commissions.

These rules are designed specifically to counter the problems specified by the FTC in the Koscot case.  Rule 1, along with compensation plan, addressed problem d), while rules 2) and 3) addressed problem a) and b).

The logic is basically that with buyback availability in place, inventory loading / pre-loading cannot happen, or even if it happens, the victim will not lose much. And retail sales rule with no incentive to recruit made Amway not fit the last factor of the Koscot test.

With all of its objections satisfied, FTC reluctantly agreed that Amway does not fit the definition of pyramid scheme as per the Koscot test, and the 3 rules adopted makes it unlikely that Amway can become a pyramid scheme, at least a Koscot-type pyramid scheme where product only flowed internally, not to retail.

Critics of the decision claimed that FTC had basically legalized a specific subset of pyramid scheme as "legal", while direct sales industry lauded the decision as creating some uniform legal framework out of the chaos without stifling direct sales industry.

How can the Amway Safeguard Rules Be Side-stepped

Amway rules are actually quite easy to side-step

The "ten retail sales rule" is almost NEVER audited. Basically Amway asks the IBO to sign a paper certifying him- or her-self as having met the requirements, and that's enough. This was later enhanced in the "Webster vs. Omnitrition" case (which is an article / definition in itself)  However, it is clear that the retail rule had never been fully enforced by any mainstream MLM company. Instead, most companies simply reclassify their lowest rank of distributors as "customers" (Herbalife comes to mind).

The "70% rule" can be easily bypassed by increasing the amount of "self-consumption" (i.e. consumed by the IBO him/herself) to an amount beyond what is 'reasonable'.

The "buyback policy" can be bypassed by sending the upline and the rest of the sales team to guilt-trip / shame-attack the IBO to force him or her to recant the buyback attempt. And the upline is easily motivated to do so because her commission will be subject to "clawback" if the buyback was executed.  Furthermore, company has plausible deniability (what they do is not my business!)

Merely claiming to be following Amway Safeguard Rules does NOT automatically make a business legitimate.  That was the ruling in Webster vs. Omnitrition. Upon hearing that ruling (and their failure to obtain a declaratory judgment) Omnitrition settled out of court.

Amway Safeguard Rules vs Product-Based Pyramid Scheme

As scams evolve in sophistication, so did the pyramid scheme, and by weakening both factors within the Koscot test, as well as exploit the loop-holes within the Amway Safeguard Rules, a new breed of pyramid scheme is born: the product-based pyramid scheme.

In a product-based pyramid scheme, there is little if any real retail sales to non-participants. Most products are consumed by the affiliates themselves. Their excuse is they need to do that to qualify for the compensation plan of their specific level. And in turn, they tell their recruits / downlines to do the same, i.e. "lead by example". Ten Retail Customer Rules are ignored, and 70% rule are sidestepped with self-consumption. The buyback rule simply doesn't apply.

The net result is inventory loading, albeit, slightly shifted responsibility. Rather than upline convincing their downline to load up on inventory to enrich themselves, it's now upline convicing themselves they need to load up inventory to keep themselves qualified... and convince their downlines to do the same. Overall, a lot of inventory got moved, but little if any retail happened. Yet the company did indeed sell products and paid the reps based on the "sales", not on recruitment... Except each rep's monthly order is automatic... known as "autoship", so essentially, each rep's commission is based on recruiting additional reps on autoship.

Amway Safeguard Rule's Future

The safeguard rules do seem sound, but due to their severe lack of enforcement since the end of Clinton presidency, they have been rendered effectively useless.

However, with closing of FHTM in 2013, there is some indication that the Obama administration may again encourage the FTC to go after the violators.

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Scam Psychology: Why Scammers Use Testimonials, and Why You Should NOT Trust Positive Reviews

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Why do advertisements almost seem to have testimonials? Because they do influence us.

Human beings are social creatures, and we do learn from each other, so when we hear testimonials, we pay attention. This is sometimes called 'social proof'. Some benefits from testimonials include:

  • It builds trust
  • It sound less sales-y
  • It demonstrates the benefits of products/service

The problem happens when we do not apply "crap filter" to testimonials, and scammers start to seed the testimonials with fake entries. In fact, you can find people who will do fake testimonials for you for a mere $5.00 USD on Fiverr.com Furthermore, in the modern world of information overload, people are less and less likely to fact-check or do "due diligence" on common stories.

Image representing Yelp as depicted in CrunchBase
Image via CrunchBase
It's estimated that in a few years, 20% of all reviews online (including testimonials) will be fake. The crowd-review websites such as Yelp, AngiesList, and so on who rely on testimonials and reviews are starting to combat this problem, and even government have started to notice such problems.

So you should NOT trust positive reviews, but seek to verify the claims.

And if you do find a sincere positive testimonial, it may STILL be "wrong"... in that the testimonial may be influenced by the five factors that result in a sincere but fake review.




What are the five factors in a sincere but "fake" review?

  • Personal Bias
  • Preconceived Notions
  • Unscientific (lack of control) results
  • Placebo Effect
  • Misattribution of efficacy


Personal bias, which is related to Ikea effect, means the speaker has a personal stake in the product (s/he bought it!) and thus wants to BELIEVE it will work (self-serving bias).

Preconceived notion means the speaker expects the product to work, therefore will unconsciously cherry-pick the results and emphasized the effects while ignoring the times that it did not work, or even misinterpret random chance as "proof".

Unscientific results (lack of proof) means result of a single person is worthless, statistically speaking, without comparison to a control subject (who did not take the product), and the quantity scaled up to eliminate random outside factors and establish true cause and effect.

Placebo effect is related to preconceived notion, as the body often reacts to placebo treatment. Thus, you need a control group (or two) to test different control conditions. Without such study, you cannot discount the placebo effect... your body responded because you expected to respond.

Finally, misattribution of efficacy often applies to combos, where the common ingredient was actually the effective ingredient, but the speaker assumed that the exotic ingredient was the real effective ingredient. A while back, I had a commented who claimed ganderama (lingzhi) coffee suppressed her appetite and helped her lose weight (so everybody should buy it). I showed her an article from Time magazine that explained ANY liquid will suppress appetite, even plain water. Never heard from her again.

Basically, testimonials nowadays need to be fact-checked, and determine how much of it you can trust, subject to these five problems of a sincere but "fake" review.

Now we come to the flip side... What should you do about negative reviews?

You should pay EXTRA attention to them.

Why? Because a lot of companies have attempted to suppress negative reviews, through lawsuits, and "reputation management" firms (some of whom use shill reviews to crowd out the bad reviews). In fact, one of my own reviews of a potential scam (at the time) was taken offline by a consultant working for the scam. One month later, they were closed by the SEC as a $850 million Ponzi scheme.

Of course, you have to treat such reviews with the same due diligence as you do to the positive reviews. Does the reviewer / testimonial giver provide evidence to support his/her bad review? Or does s/he simply "have an axe to grind" and offered all emotion but little evidence?

And beware people who tell you "don't look at review sites". What are they trying to hide?



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BREAKING NEWS: SpeakAsia head Manoj Kumar Sharma found dying in Singapore Hospital

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IDG relayed an article from Singapore... Apparently Manoj Kumar Sharma, head of Speak Asia, and fugitive from India, is dying in a Singapore hospital, and contacted a writer, and want his story to be told in another book by the author. 

The author instead published the article, where he tried to balance MKS's view (I did nothing wrong, they just don't understand my business) and what did the Indian authorities do (it's a Ponzi scheme). 

For those of you who are already convinced that you're on the right side, this is not going to change any minds, but rather, simply add fuel to your side of the story. Neither side (MKS, or EOW) had revealed all their cards. 

So read it, for what it's worth. And read all the footnotes too.  

http://news.idg.no/cw/art.cfm?id=5224F51D-B363-09BA-8F8E24AC3B9DF5B0
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MLM Dictionary: Pyramid scheme

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A pyramid scheme is a type of financial fraud that usually disguises itself as a business, but the participants earn compensation by first paying into the system some sort of fee, in exchange of right to recruit additional participants and sell the product / service, and will be compensated primarily by the number of additional participants they recruit (who also pay the fee). Little if any of the compensation will be based on actual sale of the product or service.

The earliest pyramid schemes, and modern HYIP matrix schemes, are investment frauds, in that you pay in (buy a position), recruit others, then when enough people joined, you are "cycled out" and get the big payout. This has lead to much confusion in modern times where scammers insist on using the original definition of pyramid scheme and insist their business cannot possibly be a pyramid scheme (by the old definition).

In the US, pyramid scheme is defined by the Koscot Test.

Pyramid scheme is related to Ponzi scheme, but pyramid scheme requires participants to recruit in order to be compensated, whereas the Ponzi scheme do not require recruiting.  There are many other differences between pyramid scheme and Ponzi scheme.

Pyramid schemes are known by several names to law enforcement, including franchise fraud, chain referral / endless chain, matrix scheme, and pyramid selling.

Franchise Fraud 

Franchise fraud is mainly used by the US Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), it stated:
pyramid schemes — also referred to as franchise fraud or chain referral schemes — are marketing and investment frauds in which an individual is offered a distributorship or franchise to market a particular product. The real profit is earned, not by the sale of the product, but by the sale of new distributorships. Emphasis on selling franchises rather than the product eventually leads to a point where the supply of potential investors is exhausted and the pyramid collapses
Basically, this sort of pyramid scheme sells the opportunity itself, rather than the products. Thus, it is a disguised pyramid scheme.

Note that franchises are governed by franchise laws, under the purview of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which also prosecutes pyramid schemes on the Federal level as consumer fraud.


Chain Referral / Endless Chain

In many US states, including California, "endless chain" is the same as pyramid scheme. The California Office of the Attorney General (OAG) writes:
Millions of Americans have lost money participating in pyramid schemes which are also known as "endless chains" - - because they cannot work unless the chain is endless and, of course, it cannot really be endless because at some point there are no more people willing to join the scheme.... An "endless chain" or an unlawful pyramid is a plan in which a person pays money or buys merchandise for the chance to receive money when additional participants are introduced into the scheme.
Chain referral scheme can also describe a fraudulent sales plan, where you order an item at the given price, but if you can make friends and family to also buy the same item, your price of the item will be reduced (possibly all the way up to free).  However, in reality, the item is vastly overpriced, and the demand for the item is vastly exaggerated. This was prosecuted many times by Postal Inspectors as mail fraud in the 1970's.

Please note that referral sales is ILLEGAL in the US, and if a company offers such a plan... It may be in legal trouble.


Matrix Scheme 

Matrix scheme is variant of pyramid scheme with chain referral.  Let's say there's a "matrix" for a PS4 (street value of $400). You can buy a position in the 2x4 matrix (total of 31 positions) for $20. Sometimes, something with negligible value is a part of the position (free PS3 game!). When sufficient people have purchased positions after you (30), you get your PS4.

As this is referral sales, it is generally illegal, as the item is of tiny or negligible value, and people are buying a "position". Though this scheme has a bit more in common with Ponzi scheme in that no recruitment is required (though highly encouraged).

Pyramid Selling

The term pyramid selling is mostly used in Asia and Australia. Australian "Trade Practices Act (1974)" (revised in 2010 into "Competition and Consumer Act (2010)" )specified the following:
pyramid selling scheme means a scheme with both the following characteristics:
  (a)  to take part in the scheme, some or all new participants must make a payment (a participation payment) to another participant or participants in the scheme;
  (b)  the participation payments are entirely or substantially induced by the prospect held out to new participants that they will be entitled to a payment (a recruitment payment) in relation to the introduction to the scheme of further new participants.
Hong Kong has very similar language in their 2012 update to the anti-pyramid laws, but functionally it is the same as the US definition, albeit, with looser language to allow it to apply to broader range of schemes, as several prosecutions resulted in acquittals when the lawyers found loopholes in the old laws.

In China and Hong Kong, pyramid selling also describes a new hybrid scheme, where buyers of a company's product are told they are eligible for "virtual stock options" (based on their purchases) for the company stock and if the company ever goes through IPO the buyers can realize vast profits by selling the options back to the company. In reality the products are way overpriced and IPO never happens.


Pyramid Shape has nothing to do with Pyramid Scheme

Many network marketers, trying to coerce readers into having a better opinion of network marketing, often claim that all businesses are pyramid-shaped, therefore pyramid schemes are all around us. This is disingenuous and relies on equivocation of words, as pyramid-shaped organization is completely different from a pyramid scheme. Pyramid scheme is a type of financial fraud, not an organization shape.


Please also read

Having a Product Does NOT Make a Company Not a Pyramid Scheme

Pyramid Schemes Myths Busted

Why is MLM NOT a Pyramid Scheme (at first glance)

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BREAKING NEWS: NuSkin suspends recruitment meetings in China (until further notice)

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Amidst charges by Chinese government that its agents are running a pyramid scheme, NuSkin today announced that it is suspending all recruitment meetings in China (until further notice).

NuSkin is an American MLM but operates as direct sales in China... officially. However, many local newspapers have reported, since June 2013, that many NuSkin sales teams actually operate as Multi-level Marketing, which is ILLEGAL in China, complete with pyramid organization. Many were alleged to also make fradulent health claims, and employ cult brainwashing tactics on participants.

NuSkin announced only hours ago, on 21-JAN-2014 that it will suspend all recruitment meetings in China pending further review of training, and blames a few overzealous reps of using unethical tactics to drive sales. It maintains that the reports in Chinese newspapers are exaggerated and are not typical of its presence in China.

Critics noted that it does not preclude person-to-person recruitment.

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2014-01-21/nu-skin-to-review-china-practices-after-pyramid-scheme-claims
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The Real Reasons Why Network Marketing Needs Reputation Management

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It's interesting how the topics in this blog suggest themselves: why network marketing needs reputation management. It's not because there's a bunch of "meanies" out there... though there are. It's usually because they have some actions that looks shady, and people will point that out.

Recently, a company called BidForMyMeds was reviewed on BehindMLM. The company employed a whole slew of questionable conduct, including listing some other company's management as if it's their own, and implying a far tighter integration between the two companies than there actually is.  The truth is BidForMyMeds is a marketing company that markets BidRx through MLM. However, BidForMyMeds at many times implied that they are BidRX, and borrowed various BidRX media as if that is them.

So Oz / BehindMLM published the review with the questions, wondering if BidForMyMeds is really authorized to by BidRX as it is not behaving ethically. Within hours, Oz was sent a "cease and desist" email by BidForMyMeds' lawyer who demanded the review be taken down. Oz, who knows his rights, put the threat online instead, with even MORE questions and other information received, revealing that BidRX has multiple marketing partners, none of them pretended to be BidRX. And the MONTHLY fees ($7) that BidForMyMeds charged is almost 300% the cost charged elsewhere for BidRX ($2.50), and so on and so forth. AND if you pay even more ($17), you can benefit from recruiting other people who also pay the monthly fee.

That alone takes it into the potential pyramid scheme territory.

Then Kevin "The MLM Attorney" Thompson posted an entry on his blog about Cease and Desist.. cited Oz's reaction, then discussed when C&D should be used, and when it's an empty threat.

In the comments is a Mr. Jonathan Gilliam of Momentum Factor, touting their reputation defense can deal with "online Meanies".
...Our reputation defense team similarly serves
at the front end of a company's need to "do something" to combat online
Meanies. Lawsuits as you know are often just too distracting, involved and
expensive for some CEOs.
The good news is, companies CAN
defend themselves, often without the Meanie even knowing, via online
suppression strategies...
In other words, he just spam-commented a lawyer's blog with an ad for his firm. :)

And he basically claimed that he can "bury" negative comments through "suppression", which may or may not involve shill reviews. :)

But what's *really* surprising is what sort of people would employ Mr. Gilliam's firm...




Now to be fair to Mr. Gilliam, his firm offers a WIDE VARIETY of services to network marketing companies, so the following "What People Are Saying" quotes are probably NOT a result of reputation management 'success stories'.

But it's interesting that of a few quotes that Mr. Gilliam offered, at least two of them have quote controversial histories (and possibly a few more).

Out of the six quotes offered by Mr. Gilliam's customers, two names caught my eye: Terry LaCore, and Bill Starkey.

Terry LaCore, of LaCore Enterprises (Texas), is a long-time player in the network marketing world. His name got dragged through the mud a bit when it was revealed (partly by me) that he was a hidden partner in Rippln, something that claimed to be a new way to earn money, but is now just about dead. There's also a bit about his past when he was apparently involved in some corporate fraud and settled with the SEC back around 2008. He later founded bHIP and advocated for distributor rights when some of them jumped ship from Amway to bHIP and Amway sued them for leaving with trade secrets, and he paid for the defense (and won, when Amway realized they retcon the IBO agreement)

Technically Mr. LaCore should not need reputation management, and one cannot bury court records and such. Apparently later his PR firm recommended that he publicize his side of the story and that is actually the right way to do it, but I don't know if it has anything to do with Mr. Gilliam.

As for Bill Starkey, who runs iWowwe, he was recently famous for hiring Dawn Wright-Olivares, formerly CMO of Zeek Rewards ponzi scheme as his chief marketing officer.

Frankly, I don't see what is the attraction of hiring a Ponzi schemer as your CMO... Dawn's Only accomplishment was being elected MLM Person of the Year held by BusinessForHome, Ted Nuyten's website, mainly because most Zeekheads were asked to go stuff the ballot box. That made Ted's website a joke for months. Dawn also recently coughed up 8 million, the ill-gotten gains she got from Zeek, as part of plea deal.

Seems reputation management can only go so far... You can't save a client from shooting him- or herself in the foot, but you can dress up the wound... maybe. But bury the evidence of stupidity and shady behavior? Doubtful.

Frankly, the *real* reason why network marketing needs reputation management is its serious LACK of self-policing, and weak to non-existent FTC enforcement, that allowed various pseudo-MLM companies into their fold, and allowed the existing MLM companies drift into the legally gray area between legal direct sales and illegal pyramid scheme.

But the best way to "spin" the negative news is not to fight it, or bury it, but "take it over".

Kathie Lee Gifford
Cover of Kathie Lee Gifford
Any one remember Kathy Lee Gifford linked to sweat shops?  Back in 1996? You don't? Good! Because HER reputation management worked. She took over the issue, called attention to it, emphasized her innocence (I didn't know), THEN pushed authorities to investigate and make things better, even appeared with then President Clinton on this issue.

She took over the issue, and end up being regarded as a champion for anti-sweatshop, exactly the OPPOSITE of what she's accused of.

Too bad most issues in network marketing can't be handled this way...


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Scam Psychology: Intelligence is NOT Rationality

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Many people have asked... How can intelligent people, lawyers, doctors, people who got rich through their own efforts, and so on, end up joining a scam? Aren't they intelligent enough to avoid such things? Some even use this as a bad argument that I termed "association with authority"argument, such as "X is not dumb or stupid, therefore he could not have joined a scam. Thus, whatever he joined cannot be a scam."

Turns out psychologists knew about this problem for a while, and the explanation is very simple: intelligence is not the same as rationality.

Intelligence is usually defined as "ability to acquire and apply skill and knowledge"

Rationality, on the other hand, is  "the state of having good common sense and sound judgment".

The two definitions can overlap, butare not required to overlap. It is possible to have no sound judgment, yet have ability to acquire and apply skill and knowledge. A savant, for example, esp. an "idiot savant", has the phenomenal abilities such as mental math, perfect recall, photographic memory, and so on, yet has virtually no judgment or social skills outside of his/her expertise.

Of us the common people, we are just as guilty of what appears to be irrational decisions, caused by our various cognitive biases, and often, what we WANTED to be true. We are intelligent, but we are NOT always rational.

And scammers are very quick to convince us that being intelligent is being rational... and it's rational to join their scheme. And scammers are often amateur psychologists exploiting your cognitive biases to coerce you (without you realizing it).



I previously wrote an analysis on why Zeek Rewards ponzi scheme was so successful... I'll give you a few summarized points:


  • Mis-direction -- did you know that Paul Burks was a magician, skilled in mis-direction?
  • Ikea effect -- once you participated, you feel you 'own' it
  • Spotlight effect -- you saw only one part, and you ignore the parts you can't see
  • Intuitive mind vs. Rational Mind -- they show you just enough so you don't analyze with the rational mind. Rather, you just accept what your intuitive mind says 'it's kinda like that'
  • Sunk Cost -- even if you realized it's a scam, you keep going because you are afraid of losing what you put in
  • Self-delusion -- people will pretend they did not see evidence of scam... even after it's shut down
Skepticality hi
Skepticality hi (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
And there's probably a few more.  It is clear that of the 1 million victims in Zeek Rewards, many of them are quite intelligent, but most of them are not rational when they joined.

Recently Skepticality Podcast had an interview with Dr. Keith Stanovich, who specialized in critical thinking and intelligence, and there is a long discussion on how intelligence doesn't measure everything and why isn't there a test for rationality which is arguably more useful in everyday life.

Go listen to the podcast (and maybe even subscribe to Skepticality)

http://traffic.libsyn.com/skepticality/224_Skepticality.mp3
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Bad Propaganda: Perpetuating Myths and Misunderstandings to Deflect Criticism

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Editor's Note: This is start of a new segment 'Bad Propaganda' where I will analyze bad propaganda used by various MLM promoters who, whether intentionally, or by accident, or perhaps, even ignorance, perpetuate myths, misunderstandings, half-truths, and "spin" to promote their MLM when they don't have to. I've done this several times before, but usually as some sort of rebuttal (for Wazzub, Zeek, TVI Express, and other scams). This will make it a new 'regular feature'.

When a new MLM recruit wants to express their enthusiasm for their new venture, one of the things they do now is create a web page, esp. if they wish to market online. And one of the frequently asked questions asked about many MLMs is "isn't it just a pyramid scheme?" There's the right way to answer it (explain the Koscot test and why MLM does NOT fit the Koscot test... if done correctly)... and then there is this way... done by a Vemma Rep.

In order not to embarrass him too badly, his name will not be used, and URL will NOT be included (don't want to give him any LinkJuice), but you can see a picture of his web page below...


The title is "Vemma : Scam or a legitimate opportunity for you and your friends" by "Nick".

From here on, his stuff is in blue, and my counterpoints will be in red.

You might be wondering if there is an opportunity to make money with Vemma, or if the Vemma scam allegations are true. Don't worry you have come to the right place seeking answers so look no further.

Wow, he claims to be the ONLY place on the web to offer answers about Vemma, look no further! This guy is full of himself, isn't he?

Nick (censored) is a 21 year old adventure seeker, who went from scrubbing dishes at an old hospital for minimum wage to traveling the Northwest and has built a distribution network of close to 1,000 people in the past 12 months. He has inspired young entrepreneurs into taking charge of their lives, and isn't afraid to challenge the status quo. CLICK HERE to learn about how you can become one of the next success stories on his team, and work personally with Nick and the other leaders of Treasure (censored) Vemma.

The standard rags-to-riches underdog story that appeals to the "rebel youth" crowd. 

   There are many Vemma reviews on the internet that make claims about the company, and for someone who wants to cut straight through the BS you need answers. So lets get to the bread and butter, but know that multi level marketing scams are hard to detect so in this article I will help you swim through the sludge of information on the web.

    In order to confirm or deny if Vemma is a scam you need to understand what the company is. They are a health and wellness business based out of Scottsdale Arizona. Founded in 2004 by Bk Boreyko, Vemma has done over 1 billion dollars in sales over the past nine years. Pretty big for a scam i'de say.

First paragraph is a completely waste of space, as it said nothing. Second paragraph started off wrong. To know whether Vemma is a scam, you need to define what a scam is, not what Vemma is. That comes second.

That was segued into a "too big/old to be a scam" myth, though he did couched it as a personal opinion, bad spelling and all.  Go look up FHTM should tell you it lasted 11 years before being shut down by the FTC as a pyramid scheme. Bernie Madoff's ponzi scheme took even longer. Both are much bigger than Vemma. Clearly, Nick had NO IDEA what he was talking about. 

But wait, there's more! Lots more!




     They are a direct sales marketing company that pays “brand partners” who consume their products to share them with friends and family. Vemma is the flagship product that has clinical studies done, and is in every one of there other products, Verve, Next, and Bode. Verve is the energy drink marketed towards the population who drinks Red Bull, Rockstar, and Monster. Next is the formula for kids ages 2-12, and Bode is their weight loss line geared towards the overweight.

According to Nick here, Vemma "pays" brand partners "who consumes their products to share them with friends and family". That's NOT how Vemma operates, and indeed NO network marketing company operates like this. No company pays you to drink their stuff (except taste testers). 

In Vemma, you BUY YOUR OWN STUFF to share with friends and family... and convince them to buy their own stuff... like someone convinced you. And if you convince enough people, you get a paycheck from Vemma as "commission".  And Nick tells you about that... later. 

Bad Nick! 

   Vemma has a very interesting marketing strategy that is using the consumers to market their products instead of retail and advertizing. Brand partners don't get paid for “recruiting” other members unless one of Vemma's products is purchased. Unlike a traditional pyramid scheme where participants are paid on recruitment, Vemma deals with sales and referring someone to purchase through your website.

Perhaps one should examine the cost of Verve vs. its competitors, such as Red Bull, Monster, Rockstar, and so on, and see if people actually buy them... Or they buy them because they have to in order to recruit other people to buy them? 

I found the price on Amazon to be the lowest around: $2.50 per can in lot of 24


However, Red Bull costs $1 cheaper PER CAN, and you can save even more if you "subscribe" from Amazon. 

And yes, the cans are the same size, and it's same 24 can lots. 

Which begs the question, who would buy overpriced items? 

Answer is: people would if the items come with promise that if you recruit more people to buy them, you get paid. Nobody would buy them otherwise. 

So that checks off, but what about the fact that brand partners have to pay to become a marketing rep with the company? This is because you are starting up your own business and are considered a “business owner,” and in order to own your own business you need products to sell. Just like you would need shoes if you open up your own shoe store. When you purchase one of Vemma's products from a brand partner's website you are given your own website similar to amazon.com. When someone you know wants to purchase a case or more of product they order from your website and the product is shipped straight to their door, you don't touch any product except your own. Vemma then pays you for your referral via direct deposit or paycheck.

Nick, Nick, Nick... A business owner and a sales rep are completely different roles. Nick started claiming that a brand partner is like a product demonstrator. Nick's words were: "pays brand partners who consume their products to share them with friends and family" Now Nick changed his story and claimed they are not demonstrators, but business owners that have to BUY the products to share. 

That's called a bait-and-switch. That's fraud, Nick. 

Then it gets worse. Nick claims that for merely buying from a brand partner's website you get your own sales website from Vemma. Does that make any sense to you? It only makes sense if you actually JOINED Vemma as a brand partner, not for merely purchasing some drinks. Yet earlier, Nick claimed that what you do is you get other people to order drinks online, you need to do no retail. His words were: " referring someone to purchase through your website"

Clearly, Nick has no idea what's the difference between a customer (who just buy Vemma), and a brand partner (who joined Vemma *and* buy Vemma). If there is no separation between customer and "affiliate" (inside the company), the business is likely a pyramid scheme, as per the Koscot test. 

Think about it, in one paragraph, he says your job is to get people to buy through your website. If that's the case, why do you need to buy stuff for yourself? Clearly, you are doing it for your upline, just as you are signing up people to do it for you. And so on. This is called "endless chain". It's same as a pyramid scheme. 

   The Vemma scam claims are made by either someone who isn't fully educated about the business, or failed as a brand partner and will blame everything but their own lack of effort. Calling Vemma a scam is like buying a membership to a gym then saying that the gym scammed you because your still overweight. They provide all the tools you need to become successful but it's up to you to use them.

Hmmm... is there any evidence to back up the claim that scam claims are all by misunderstandings? No. It's an opinion and not supported by any evidence. And it's a popular myth. However, as explained above, it seems that Nick's own understanding of Vemma and law are severely lacking. Thus, it's his OWN misunderstanding that lead him to believe Vemma is not a scam. 

Nick then pulled the "gym analogy", which is a popular Vemma myth being passed around a bit. And the analogy is full of holes. Can you think of some reasons that the gym can be scamming you? Let's see... No workout machine available? Bad neighborhood? Unreasonable time limits? Rough crowd? Unreasonably hot location? Bad shower room and changing room? Any of these could be the gym having scammed you and you haven't lost any weight. Revanchist over at YPRPariah have a whole article on this gym analogy 

But basically, this is dismissing criticism with bad arguments. 


   Vemma is backed by some big names in the NFL, NBA, and American television. Teams like the Phoenix suns, Michael Jordan and the Charlotte Bobcats. Celebrities like Doctor OZ, Extreme makeover weight loss edition's Chris and Heidi Powell, NASCAR, and many more. So realize that if Vemma was some type of scam or scheme they would have been shut down years ago. Well known organizations and celebrities wouldn't risk their reputation with a network marketing scam.

Vemma is not backed by any of them. Vemma PAID to advertise with them. There was a good list over at TruthInAdvertising on the myths perpetuated by Vemma reps such as this. Then Nick had to use the"association with celebrity" myth... again. Perhaps Nick can ask Dish Network on how come they didn't know FHTM was a scam? FHTM sold Dish, along with many other well known brands. 

    The reason why people are so skeptical about network marketing and companies like Vemma is because anyone is allowed to join. So when you have a client base of experienced and non experienced marketers you will see people post links all over facebook, and mass text their friends. This is the wrong way to go about a business and is the sole reason for such skepticism and Vemma scam claims. What you need to do is find a team of people who can teach you how to grow your business without pestering all of your friends and family to sign up, and you have come to the right place!

The reason people are skeptical about network marketing is the amount of outright lies, myths, half-truths, and misunderstandings perpetuated by people such as Nick here. Nick threw up a strawman, pounced it, then claimed "victory" over people skeptical of Vemma 'opportunity'. 

Nick is not alone. There are hundreds of Vemma websties and articles similar to his, with similar words full of half-truths, misunderstandings, omissions, inconsistent logic, logical fallacies, and fractured arguments. 

Why don't Vemma do marketing PROPERLY?

Maybe it's because they don't know how...

or they can't.
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BREAKING NEWS: Herbalife may also be under investigation in China

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When reports of NuSkin representative's alleged misconduct surfaced in Chinese media back in June and July 2013 in China it received little western media attention. However, when the Chinese Communist Party media People's Daily repeated the allegations, and called for local authorities to investigate and stamp out pyramid schemes and pyramid selling, western media noticed, and NuSkin stock took a dive, and Herbalife stock also took a dive because it's already under attack in the US. 

Turns out, Herbalife may be under more direct threat than people realized, as NYPost managed to find a report in August 2013 in First Financial Daily (of China) that Herbalife reps in China encouraged front-loading and thus is in violation of anti-pyramid-selling laws in China, among other potential law-breaking.  Quoting from the report... 
Recently, First Financial Daily discovered through private investigation that, while Herbalife is fast growing in the China market, its sales model is suspicious in five respects: collection of "recruitment fees" in disguised form, suspected exaggeration of  product effects, possible windfall profit derived from products, fast growing clubs absent of strict supervision and control, and product purchase overly dependent on sales representatives or potential sales representatives…… A series of issues have deviated the direct selling model of this company, and have contradicted with certain provisions in the "Regulations on the Prohibition of Pyramid Selling" promulgated and implemented by the State Council in 2005. As a result, suspicion has been brought up that Herbalife's sales model is a pyramid scheme. 
The specific offense mentioned first in the report is reps are required to buy $2000 USD worth of Herbalife products to join. They're told that 1) it's easy to sell, 2) it demonstrates that they are serious about this opportunity, and 3) there are plenty of people who want to join and only limited positions available.

There's a lot more.



This sort of "front-loading" is very much frowned upon int he US, and outright ILLEGAL and PROHIBITED in China, where "required purchases upon joining" is nothing more than a buying a position in a pyramid disguised as 'sales'. If the investigation results are accurate, Herbalife is a product-based pyramid scheme in China, at least partly.

Other offenses, such as "prescribing" nutritional supplements (Formula One is sort of pushed as a "cure-all", albeit rather circumspectly) is a lessor form of NuSkin problems (i.e. less egregious).

While there's no formal call by People's Daily to investigate Herbalife, one wonders if that is coming down the pipeline soon, and may depend on how NuSkin reacts to the call for investigation (other than freezing all recruitment meetings).

Stay tuned.


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MLM Absurdities: How Scam Evolve Around MLMs and Pseudo-MLM Scams

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Previously, MLM Skeptic have pointed out that many so-called "legitimate" MLMs have scams revolving around them in what's known as "lead generation" companies. They work by sending out teases to large number of people by selling them bogus "business starter kits", then sell the info of these people who bought a kit to affiliates desperate to sign people up. Company benefits twice. (Read full details on the Verge)

Herbalife had realized this and in 2013 have disallowed the use of most lead generations companies, esp. those ran or have close ties to its own affiliates. According to its own affiliate agreement, affiliates are prohibited from selling leads to each other, but these lead generations companies had NOT been scrutinized... UNTIL Ackman raised the pyramid scheme allegations.

While the Herbalife situation is rather unique, in that Shawn Dahl's company is a clone of his mother-in-laws pyramid operation outlawed in Canada (also for Herbalife), the phenomenon of creating potentially ILLEGAL business around supposedly legitimate companies is hardly unique to Herbalife.

Let us explore the underbelly of network marketing... You will learn about:
  • How "fake" lead generation really works
  • How "sales aid" companies perpetuate the "tool scam"
  • How top affiliates get rich from training other affiliates
  • How feeder matrix schemes feed pyramid schemes
  • How fake ad posting requirements in Ponzi schemes spawn ad posting companies
Let's get started... First stop... How "fake" lead generation really works...


How "Fake"Lead Generation Works

Ever heard ads on radio, or seen ads on TV, that says 'easy part-time job work at home, almost unlimited income, call this number to find out how'? They often appear on radio programs like Dr. Laura, Sean Hannity, and so on. That's often from a lead generation company.

If you call that number, you'll be given a sales pitch about you simply pay "shipping and handling" (about $10) for this business starter kit. Buried in the fine print is your card will be charged $50 unless you "return the kit within 14 days". And the kit is merely an application form and a DVD that contains a video pitch to join some mysterious program that has a ton of income. Flashy video, but contains no substance whatsoever.

Then you start to get phone calls, that you are interested in this opportunity, have you seen the video, are you interesting, etc.

What really happened is when you "bought" the so-called kit, your name was put on a "leads" list and sold to some desperate network marketing noobs who can't seem to make a sale or can't be bothered to pound the sidewalk looking for leads, but would instead, pay money to someone for the lead, and your name was just sold to this noob (for up to $100), who then call you and try to recruit you to be his/her downline.

The company benefited TWICE, once by you buying their promo teaser, and again by selling your name and phone number to the person who bought a lead.

The Verge has full coverage on this. It covered Herbalife, and it's since been confirmed that many of the high flyers in Herbalife have their own lead generation companies and these "teaser promo firms" (which are really the same). Other Herbalife top flyers left when the lead generation companies got disapproved in 2013. Another declared bankruptcy. Coincidence? Probably not.

There's a subset of lead generation companies that are even LESS legal, as they feed ponzi schemes. Before Zeek Rewards was shut down by SEC in August 2012, several companies are willing to supply email addresses to members for a fee so the members can "give away bids" in order to participate in 'profit-sharing'. As the profit are derived from the bids bought by the members, it's a ponzi scheme... $850 million ponzi scheme. And there's no proof that any of these email addresses have real people behind it. Indeed, Zeek would prefer a fake address, as with a real person behind the address, those bids may get used, rather than simply expire in 30 days, unused. Indeed, several people closely associated with the company may be launching these feeders before Zeek was shutdown.


How "Sales Aid" Companies Perpetuate the "Tool Scam"

You can benefit greatly from network marketing without being a network marketer. How? By selling tools and self-help related to network marketing. Want to know why network marketers love Robert Kiyosaki's Rich Dad Poor Dad? Because Kiyosaki was one of them... he was in Amway. Now only was he in Amway, he was selling "training tapes" with Bill Galvin, part of Yager Group, an "Amway Motivational Organization".  Without Yager Group, which popularized Rich Dad Poor Dad back in 1998/1999 among its members, Rich Dad Poor Dad would have NEVER found a "real" publisher and made into a worldwide phenomenon today.

But Amway Motivational Organizations are commercial cults, and Yager group alone made hundreds of tapes, that sold for $6 each back in late 1980's on various topics related to Amway marketing and motivation. You can often still find them on eBay, of all places. And these are hardly the only items sold to the new affiliates, already struggling to make sales even though they were initially told it would be easy. And these training material added to the cost, leading some anti-MLM folks to call this "the second pyramid".

And it's not just tapes (of the week), there's also "book of the month", conventions, seminars, and rallies, that you are expected to attend, lest you be accused of "not trying hard enough" and "fear of missing out" (FOMO). And Amway knows, which is why it settled a class action lawsuit in 2011 and started offering money back on even training materials (for 90 days, same as their products sold to IBOs).

To learn more about the "Amway" Tool Scam, visit the website by Tex.

How Top Affiliates Can Earn Through "Training"

In many parts of life, you want to learn from the best, so it is not surprising that some people want to learn whatever the top affiliates want to teach in network marketing. The problem is... What are they really learning?

In Fortune High-Tech Marketing, two of the top affiliates offered $100 per day or higher "bootcamps" back in 2011.
Ruel Morton and Todd Rowland, two top Fortune money earners, are both offering "boot camps" to train the thousands of salespeople under them in their "downline." Morton's now-frequent pitches for the $395 three-day seminars at his Texas ranch are not subtle.
"You can either choose to be a king or you can settle for being the subject of someone else's kingdom!" he exclaims on his website, RuelMorton.com.
...
On his website, CoachRowland.com, Rowland says the benefits of his new $100-a-day "millionaire boot camp" include "making big checks immediately." The training cost — $150 if a spouse attends — includes food, activities, training, a workbook and "a set of Todd's favorite educational CD's."
"Presidential ambassadors" such as Morton and Rowland average $1,240,992 in income a year, yet make up just 0.07% of the company's representatives, according to a Fortune document. It also shows 30% of Fortune representatives make nothing, and 54% of those with earnings averaging $93 a month, before costs.
FHTM was shut down by FTC and six state attorney generals in January 2013 as a nationwide pyramid scheme.

Let's assume for a moment that you are dealing with something that's NOT obviously a pyramid scheme. Is there something you can learn from the leaders that you can replicate?

As explained above, one of the surest ways to benefit from MLM is to start your own teaser promo / lead generation company. But that's probably both illegal and amoral.

However, here's another factor that you may not have considered... That the top players may have an inside track.

Did you know that John Tartol, who's on the board of directors at Herbalife, has TWELVE of his clan (his sister, her son, etc.) among the President's Club?

Did you know that Bob Proctor, personal friend of Vemma head BK Boreyko, has his wife and his daughter at Rank 11 "Ambassador", making 15K a month from Vemma?

Are those something you can "learn"? What are you really paying to learn? Probably just a feel-good story for "motivation", little else. You cannot learn the familiar relations or the inside track that these successful folks seem to have. How much do those special relations factor into their success? I don't know. But it is NOT ZERO.

How Feeder Schemes Work

Technically speaking, the "leader generation" companies above are quasi-legal feeder schemes. They attract potential recruits and feed them (for a fee) to someone as a downline. It's quite easy for the organizer to attach a few recruits to his or her own downline when there's a good supply of them.

But when the feeder scheme is feeding a scam... then it becomes a feeder scam.

TVI Express was a very obvious pyramid scheme that started in 2009, but it did not die until its head, Tarun Trikha was, arrested in India. However, several 'feeder scams' were created to feed members into TVI Express, and often used its own matrix scheme.

There are plenty of feeder scams feeding other suspect pyramid schemes.

How fake ad posting requirements in Ponzi schemes spawn ad posting companies

Zeek Rewards ponzi kept its investors thinking they are doing "promotion" for the company by giving the investors "busy work"... posing ONE ad somewhere on the Internet for Zeekler every day, then "report" the posting to ZeekRewards. There is no proof that this posting was ever verified by Zeek, and Alexa ratings showed that Zeekler traffic, when compared to ZeekRewards traffic, is miniscule. The ads are not being seen, and has NO effect. It is "busy work", nothing more, much like animals at a zoo are "enriched" through trick food storage that they need to "figure out" how to open and get their food through "contra-freeloading".

But some people are too lazy, and are willing to PAY people to post the ads... for a cheap monthly fee. Thus, the "ad posting companies".

AdAssure is one such, launched merely two months before Zeek was shut down, it has since relaunched as AdAssureLite, this time posting ads for TelexFree, suspect Ponzi scheme on two continents.

Other companies will post ads for suspect ponzi schemes too. AND recruit you.


Conclusion

There are many scams revolving around scams and allegedly legitimate companies.

These supposedly legitimate companies know about these "side-businesses" all along, and have allowed them to profit off their members through plausible deniability... until they are called upon to explain themselves in court of law. Amway settled one such long-standing lawsuit in 2011, and Herbalife, under pressure from Ackman's epic short in 2013, cut ties to most lead generation companies in hopes of appeasing the FTC.

The "tool scam" have been around for several decades.

There are tons of other scams feeding yet more scams. Zeek Rewards ponzi and TVI Express pyramid both have scams revolving around it, from ad posting to feeder matrix to "lead generation".

Be careful out there. Even if the MLM is not a scam, you can still fall for one of the peripheral scams.

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BREAKING NEWS: WCM777 (aka Kingdom 777) Outlawed in California, ordered to cease operations

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WCM777 and World Capital Market has been outlawed in California, as of January 8th, 2014, by order of California Commissioner of Business Oversight.

Order was issued originally on January 8th, 2014, appeared on official website on January 15th, 2014, and only noticed today by BehindMLM. Quoting from the end of the order:
Based upon the foregoing findings, the California Commissioner of Business Oversight is of the opinion that World Capital Market, Inc., WCM777, Inc., WCM777 Limited, Ming Xu, Zhi Liu and Harold Zapata engaged in the offer and sale of securities in the form of WCM777 membership units. 
These securities have not been qualified under the California Corporate Securities Law of 1968, in violation of section 25110 of the Corporations Code. 
Pursuant to section 25532 of the California Corporate Securities Law of 1968, World Capital Market, Inc., WCM777, Inc., WCM777 Limited, Ming Xu, Zhi Liu and Harold Zapata are hereby ordered to desist and refrain from the further offer or sale of securities in the State of California, including but not limited to WCM777 membership units, unless and until qualification has been made under the law or unless exempt. 
The California Commissioner of Business Oversight is further of the opinion that World Capital Market, Inc., WCM777, Inc., WCM777 Limited, Ming Xu, Zhi Liu and Harold Zapata offered and sold securities in the form of WCM777 membership units, by means of written and oral communications including untrue statements of material fact and omission of material facts necessary to make the statements not misleading, in violation of section 25401 of the Corporations Code. 
Pursuant to section 25532 of the California Corporate Securities Law of 1968, World Capital Market, Inc., WCM777, Inc., WCM777 Limited, Ming Xu, Zhi Liu and Harold Zapata are hereby ordered to desist and refrain from offering or selling any security in the State of California, by means of any written or oral communication which includes an untrue statement of a material fact or omits to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading. 
This Order is necessary, in the public interest, for the protection of investors and consistent with the purposes, policies, and provisions of the Corporate Securities Law of 1968. 
Dated: January 8, 2014
Sacramento, California



Scammers who have previously recruited people into WCM777, are now trying to push them into other schemes... Such as Lucrazon, which had been previously identified by MLM Skeptic as being very similar to a busted scam 13 years ago called SkyBiz.

Any victims in California should send their complaint to California attorney general's office, to encourage the OAG to start possible criminal investigations.

Those not in California should send the complaint to equivalent units in your state's attorney general office, or your country's equivalent.

You can also send the complaint to the US Securities Exchange Commission.

And please don't forget to copy your complaint to Hong Kong Police... as WCM777 / Kingdom777 is in Hong Kong now.

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Wall Street Runs on Greed... And Conspiracies (so Don't Trust Them)

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English: Wall Street sign on Wall Street
English: Wall Street sign
on Wall Street
(Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Previously, MLM Skeptic had pointed out the futility of using stock price as a measure of the company's "legitimacy". Wall Street will drive the stock prices higher as long as the company remains profitable, no matter how many people it screwed over.

However, Wall Street also runs on fear. Merely mention of Senator Markey's letter to SEC and FTC asking for an investigation into Herbalife dropped its stock price down more than 10% in a day.

And this fear had turned some stock analysts into conspiracy theorists, looking for someone to blame, and who better than the ultimate stock market boogeyman, and Herbalife "nemesis" Bill Ackman?

Brian Bolan published an essay on Zachs that claimed not only is Herbalife a good bet, he outright accused Senator Markey of colluding (perhaps unwittingly) with Bill Ackman to drive down Herbalife stock price to help with Ackman's epic short that started back at the end of 2012!



What evidence did he have?

  • One nebulous anonymous "put" started 2 weeks ago: 45000 shares of put. 
  • Bill Ackman met with Markey's staff some time in fall 2013.
  • The questions posed by the Senator is a lot like Ackman's questions 
Oh, really, that's it? That's not even circumstantial evidence. Consider these following FACTS
  • FACT: There is no telling who started those puts, as they're traded all over the place
  • FACT: Bill Ackman met with a lot of people in 2013. Thousands, maybe more. 
  • FACT: All questions regarding whether a company's a pyramid scheme will focus on the same issues, such as Koscot test, Omnitrition case, amount of actual retail, and so on. 
In other words, Bill Bolan's got a handful of nothing. 

Bolan conceded that Ackman can lobby anyone in the government. 

Did he note that Herbalife spent 1.34 MILLION on lobbying in 2013? Which is more than pharmaceutical company 4 times Herbalife's size? (Amway only spent 330K in 2013 on lobbying)

Did he note that Herbalife has no less than FOUR lobbying firms? And may be outspending Ackman on lobbying by margin of 10 to 1? 

So either Herbalife hired a bunch of idiots and wasted their money... or Ackman's argument is far more persuasive. 

And his "proof" that Herbalife stocks is bullish? "Consensus estimates" rose for 29 quarters. That's just bandwagon effect. And due to the price drop, bandwagon had clearly reversed directions, and he's betting it'll reverse yet again. 

Is this what passes for stock analysis nowadays? 




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Guest Post: Vemma and Napoleon Hill's "Think and Grow Rich" Part 1 of 6

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Cover of "Think and Grow Rich, Original 1...
Cover via Amazon
Many self-proclaimed financial gurus are fond of quoting Napoleon Hill's "Think and Grow Rich". I have that book around here somewhere, along with Dale Carnegie's "How to Gain Friends and Influence People". Those two books, along with "Rich Dad Poor Dad" sort of became must-have books in recent years, for income seekers.

However, it appears that many people have been quoting Napoleon Hill out of context.

"SlayerofScams", a fellow scambuster on IGN, had this to say about people who wrongly applied the sound advice of Napoleon Hill. Here is part 1 of 6 of his "Napoleon Hill, from beyond the grave", which is reposted with his permission. Content's unchanged except a few bits of editor's note, and slight formatting changes.

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SlayerofScams / Dec 30, 2013.

I have discovered that Bob Proctor is one of Vemma's most notable shills and that his wife, Linda Proctor, has been given a prominent position within the Vemma pyramid. Proctor disgraces his former good name and defecates all over whatever legacy he might have otherwise had by promoting the illegal pyramid scheme that is Vemma. Because of that foolish decision, Bob Proctor will now forever be remembered in history as nothing other than a lowdown dirty scammer.

(editor's note: Bob's daughter Colleen Filicetti, has the same Vemma rank as her stepmom, Linda: Ambassador, making about 15000 per month.)

Over the weekend, I was watching an old Proctor seminar video (it looked to be from the late 1980's although I am not sure exactly when it was released), in which he basically paraphrases the 1937 book by Napoleon Hill, Think and Grow Rich, along with a few other books. In that seminar Proctor appears to be a respectable guy. That seminar presents some good ideas (although Proctor admits that the ideas are not his own).

Then I watched a video of Proctor shilling at a Vemma convention from 2013, and presenting those same ideas that he presented in the old seminar, in order to justify Vemma as a great company, and to justify all of Vemma's victims as winners.

Proctor was one of the people behind The Secret which was big about 6 years ago. The Secret is basically a plagiarization of Hill's book, albeit The Secret also cuts out a vast majority of the sensible advice that Hill claims (many times!) to be mandatory parts of his book. That is why reasonable people usually condemn The Secret as crazy rubbish, whereas Hill's book remains famous and popular to this day.

In Proctor's seminar and in his Vemma convention shilling, Proctor directly gives credit to Hill and Hill's book, professes his undying love for Hill's book, and tells all his fellow Vemma shills that they too should get and read Hill's book.

All of that has led me to start to read Hill's book.

Here is some good news: Hill's book is in the public domain and so it is legally free for anyone to get and read. Here is a link to it:

https://archive.org/stream/Think_and_Grow_Rich/think-and-grow-rich-napoleon-hill_djvu.txt

To address the sane readers of this thread: for personal interest, you might want to read that book for some sensible advice on how someone, maybe yourself, might possibly get rich (of course, no guarantees exist). I am sure many of you have read it already. To give a brief summary of Hill's book: Hill interviewed Andrew Carnegie, and Carnegie introduced Hill to most of the richest men in America during Hill's lifetime. Hill spent 25 years interviewing them in order to learn their secrets and find out what they had in common, so that he could present to his readers a sound theory about how someone might get rich.

For the remainder of this post, I will address not the sane readers, but rather, the Vemma shills/victims.



To any Vemma shill/victim reading this, please take the advice of one of your most notable cult masters, Bob Proctor, and read Hill's book.

Hill says that anyone who gets rich does so by first making a good plan to sell either real products or real services. I can't remember off the top of my head where exactly in the book that I read that, and searching for a direct quotation is difficult, because Hill uses the word "sell" very frequently. I will post the direct quotation later, when I re-read the book (I haven't finished reading it once as of yet).

But, here is the point: as a Vemma shill/victim, you are not selling any product or service. You are selling only a "business opportunity " that does not exist (recruiting people underneath you into an illegal pyramid scheme is not a "business opportunity," and you know that you aren't even trying to sell the Verve garbage). You are selling nothing but a substance-less delusion of riches. In other words, you fail at meeting one of Hill's main criteria for becoming rich: having a good plan for selling either real products or real services.

As Proctor and all other notable Vemma shills will tell you, Hill's book also says:
A QUITTER NEVER WINS - AND - A WINNER NEVER QUITS.
But in the same section of Hill's book that immediately precedes that line (on page 91 in the version that I linked to above), is another quotation that is especially pertinent to you, the Vemma shills/victims, emphasis mine:
Your achievement can be no greater than your PLANS are sound. That may seem to be an axiomatic statement, but it is true. Samuel Insull lost his fortune of over one hundred million dollars.
The Insull fortune was built on plans which were sound. The business depression forced Mr. Insull to CHANGE HIS PLANS; and the CHANGE brought "temporary defeat," because his new plans were NOT SOUND. Mr. Insull is now an old man, he may, consequently, accept "failure" instead of "temporary defeat," but if his experience turns out to be FAILURE, it will be for the reason that he lacks the fire of PERSISTENCE to rebuild his plans. 
No man is ever whipped, until he QUITS-in his own mind. This fact will be re-peated many times, because it is so easy to "take the count" at the first sign of defeat. 
James J. Hill met with temporary defeat when he first endeavored to raise the necessary capital to build a railroad from the East to the West, but he, too turned defeat into victory through new plans. 
Henry Ford met with temporary defeat, not only at the beginning of his automo-bile career, but after he had gone far toward the top. He created new plans, and went marching on to financial victory. 
We see men who have accumulated great fortunes, but we often recognize only their triumph, overlooking the temporary defeats which they had to surmount before "arriving".
NO FOLLOWER OF THIS PHILOSOPHY CAN REASONABLY EXPECT TO AC-CUMULATE A FORTUNE WITHOUT EXPERIENCING "TEMPORARY DE-FEAT."When defeat comes, accept it as a signal that your plans are not sound, rebuild those plans, and set sail once more toward your coveted goal.

Now, Vemma shills/victims, do you see your problem? Right there, Hill is telling you what your problem is. If you keep failing (losing money every month) with Vemma, that is because your plans are UNSOUND and you must change your plans by leaving Vemma. Leaving Vemma does not mean that you are quitting with your plan to get rich. Rather, leaving Vemma means you are doing the only sane thing that you possibly can do to have any hope of getting rich. But don't take my word for it - take Hill's word. Hill has given you the great advice to leave Vemma right there on a silver platter, in the words that I have quoted from Hill right above this paragraph.

Did you really think that participating in an illegal pyramid scheme like Vemma would be a sound plan? No sane person would agree that it is - Hill certainly would not. If you are sane, neither will you. If you are have lost your sanity as a result of brainwashing by the cult masters who recruited you, you should please seek psychiatric help immediately - I am not joking. Tell the best psychiatrist that you can find that you have been brainwashed into a cult that is an illegal pyramid scheme and that they have convinced you to believe that you will get rich by participating in the scheme, even though it is making you lose money every month. If you can't take your brain back on your own, your psychiatrist will be able to get it back for you. If you are a minor who has been recruited by Vemma, then please ask your parents or guardians to find a psychiatrist for you.

If you do not leave Vemma, then Hill is calling you a loser. If you stay in Vemma, then in Hill's words, you "lack the persistence to change or rebuild your plans," and therefore, Hill says, you will always remain a "failure."

Here is another quotation from Hill's book that is highly relevant to you Vemma shills/victims, emphasis mine:
An educated man is one who has so developed the faculties of his mind that he may acquire anything he wants, or its equivalent, without violating the rights of others.
You, Vemma shills/victims, are violating the rights of every single person your recruit, by duping them into breaking the law by participating in an illegal pyramid scheme. You are also violating their rights by brainwashing them into letting Vemma rob them on a monthly basis. You are also violating their rights by brainwashing them into scamming others by recruiting new victims into the pyramid underneath themselves.

Stop being a bad person and stop violating others' rights, and instead, do like Hill is telling you to do: do what an educated person does - find a legitimate way to make money that will not violate the rights of others.

If I find more relevant quotations from Hill's book after I read more of it, I will post them in this thread too.

To add in more irony and hypocrisy via Proctor, we can again look to Proctor's old seminar, wherein Proctor quotes Einstein's commonly-known definition of insanity:
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
(editor's note: this quote is actually misattributed. It's from Narcotics Anonymous.)

For how many months or years, O Vemma victims, do you plan to keep on losing your money to Vemma over and over again, with the false hope that one day doing so will make you rich?

After you have matched up your continued participation in Vemma with Hill's quotation as given above, next match up your continued participation in Vemma with Einstein's definition of insanity. Both Hill and Einstein would agree that you trying to get rich via scamming others to join underneath you into an illegal pyramid scheme named Vemma is insane. You will never get rich by persisting in your insanity.

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Originally posted on IGN by SlayerofScams, reposted with author's permission. 

Stayed tuned as the other 5 parts are coming soon!

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MLM Basics: Why Had Network Marketing Lost Its Love of Retail?

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Modern network marketing companies lost their love of retail, and thus its primary purpose.

According to the law and their implied purpose, a network marketing company's purpose is to retail stuff through their affiliates (IBOs, distributors, counselors, salespeople... whatever). However, few if any of modern MLM's verify that the products they sold to their affiliates are actually retailed. Almost all network marketing companies merely require a signed "promise" from the affiliates that they promise to honor the Amway Safeguard Rule #1 "Retail Customer Rule". And without retail, the common affiliates's only income would be to recruit additional affiliates (who also do not retail, since retail is hard). If you extrapolate this out, you have a bunch of salesepeople who sold stuff to themselves, while recruiting yet more people like that. That would make it a pyramid scheme.

The Omnitrition Case and Lack of True Retail

In the Webster vs. Omnitrition case, Webster, an affiliate of Omnitrition, sued Omnitrition of being a pyramid scheme. The company responded by asking the court for a summary judgment, i.e. "Court, please tell me (and whoever sued me) I am NOT a pyramid scheme! I use Amway Safeguard Rules! I can't be!" After looking at the evidence,  the court ruled that if the company (Omnitrition) does not audit actual retail, then the company cannot use this "signed promise" to prove they are not a pyramid scheme. Omnitrition then immediately settled the lawsuit with Webster, as they apparently find paying off Webster, et al. to be easier than actually auditing their retail.

Yet dozen years after Omnitrition case, no major network marketing company that I know of, audits retail.

The implication is mindblowing: virtually all major network marketing companies in the US are in danger of being declared a pyramid scheme, despite their claimed adoption of Amway Safeguard Rules that supposedly separated network marketing from pyramid schemes, because they do NOT audit retail.

When Herbalife was first accused by Bill Ackman to be a pyramid scheme at the end of 2012, Herbalife cannot cite how many retail customers it has. Even now in 2014, Herbalife is STILL citing the retail number it EXTRAPOLATED from surveys it conducted in 2013. Herbalife cited a lot of ancillary numbers, like "amount of products directly shipped to non distributors" (31% IIRC), but it has NO RETAIL NUMBERS.

Herbalife classified their ranks by amount of downlines they have (no downline, single level downline, multi-level downlines), and claimed those with no downline are "customers", and those with single level downline are retailers.

THIS MAKES NO SENSE. By definition, EVERY distributor, no matter if they have downline or not, ARE RETAILERS, if the company was following the Amway Safeguard Rules!

Herbalife also produced survey results in 2013 that claimed 44% of its distributors have NO INTENTION OF RETAIL PROFIT, and 73% PRIMARILY JOINED FOR 25% DISCOUNT.

Why would a company NOT encourage retail, which is at the heart of network marketing?

Because lack of retail enrich those at the very top of the company and the company itself, with minimal effort and expenses needed all the way around (company or affiliate).


No Retail, No Profit (for you)

When you retail a product you bought "wholesale" from the company, both you and the company profits. You earned the markup over the wholesale price, and company earned whatever they marked up over their true costs. And your upline benefits.

If you self-consume the products, and not sell them (like eating all the food you're supposed to be selling), you spent money on the products, but you haven't generated any profit for you. The company, on the other hand, don't care, since they earned money. Your upline benefits too.

So what incentive is there for them to teach you to retail? None. They don't care what you do with the product. As long as you keep buying the stuff, they don't care. It generates sales for them. Why should they "waste" energy in teaching you? In fact, Omnitrition was infamous for telling its affiliates buy 1000 bucks of their stuff and GIVE THEM AWAY to participate in their comp plan. They don't care about YOUR retail profit... Once you paid them, they don't give a **** about what you do with the product. Pour it down the drain, drink it, give them away, they ALREADY got YOUR money.

(They can *sell* you lessons... that may or may not work, but that'd be a part of the "tool scam".)

But there's a more fundamental problem... Lack of retail violates the basic premise of multi-level marketing... that the upline is supposed to benefit from the SALES EFFORTS of their downlines. And sales efforts IMPLIES RETAIL. No retail, no sales effort, yet company and upline still profits.

One of the "defenses" offered for this behavior is "but the lowest level affiliates got the products, even at a discount. So they did not 'lose' anything. AND they can return the stuff for 90% refund within stipulated period. So what's the problem?"

The answer is also within the Omnitrition case, as the court had examined the entire Amway Safeguard rules and how did Omnitrition implemented it. It had *also* ruled that if nobody was properly informed of the refund rules, little if any proof it was actually simple to use, etc. it ALSO cannot be used as defense against being allegedly a pyramid scheme.

Furthermore, consider this point. Amway's "ten retail customer rule" means you sell to ten different customers every month. If you sell to yourself (self-consume), you only made ONE sale. So if you still certified that you sold to many retail (5, 10, whatever) you lied. And the company *knows* you lied because you can't POSSIBLY have consumed all that by yourself, as it knows exactly how much it shipped to you.

They don't care. "Sale" is "sale" to them. They don't care whether their product reaches "real" customers. The company has NO INCENTIVE to enforce the retail rule. In fact, it's an EXPENSE to them. They want to AVOID IT at all costs.

The difference is whose money end up going to them... A customer's money.. or YOUR money.

Or in other words, if you're told that you can make money selling this, then you're told 70% of you don't expect to make a profit (and 90+% of you won't any way)  which is the lie? (Answer: "you can make money selling this")


Potential Solutions

There are several solutions, but all are heavily resisted by companies and the DSA.

1) Require affiliates to submit online reports (which are automatically compiled if all orders are done online, so this is only regarding LOCAL sales), and add random audits. Companies claim this is way too much paperwork for them and for their affiliates, even in modern age of computers and data mining and smartphones tablets and barcodes and such.

2) Outlaw self-consumption, forcing all sales to be retail, PERIOD. This is especially resisted by the DSA, which went around various states and convinced some MLM friendly states, such as Utah, to adopt legislation that specifically legalized  self-consumption. This also seem to have a logical problem in that some self-consumption ought to be legal, but only "reasonable amounts". What's reasonable would be dependent on the product.

3) Require affiliates who joined only for the 'wholesale discount' (which according to Herbalife includes 73% of its distributors) to be kicked out of distributor / affiliate program, and dump them into a "preferred customer" program, where they still count as customers and thus get a discount, but CANNOT RECRUIT ANY ONE (they are customers, not upline wannabes).

The final solution was partially adopted by many network marketing companies already, even Herbalife.  However, it is a workaround, not a true solution, as it does not address the real issue: how does a network marketing company prove it is actually retailing the products to the public, when it only tracks product movement up to the distributors? Pushing the self-consumers out of the distributor count would give the company more "accurate" sales numbers, but if those numbers are not collected the answer is still not available.

It is as if the various network marketing companies are deliberately attempting to AVOID knowing how much retail they really do, as "willful blindness". Which is quite curious because the whole idea of network marketing is to get the products to market without going through traditional retail channels.

And it is this inherently conflicting behavior, "cognitive dissonance", that may be the root cause for all the bad connotation that dogged network marketing for the past several decades.

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BREAKING NEWS: WCM777 / Kingdom 777 also banned in New Hampshire and Colorado

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Guest Post: Vemma and Napoleon Hill's "Think and Grow Rich", Part 2 of 6

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Previously we had SlayerofScams, a fellow scambuster on IGN, posting his essay on how people misconstrue Napoleon Hill's advice to coerce the weak-minded sheeple. [ Part 1 of 6 ]

Here's part 2.

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SlayerOfScams, Dec 30, 2013

Here is some more wisdom from Napoleon Hill to Vemma victims. This is one of Hill's thirty causes for failure at life:
29. GUESSING INSTEAD OF THINKING. Most people are too indifferent or lazy to acquire FACTS with which to THINK ACCURATELY. They prefer to act on "opinions" created by guesswork or snap-judgments.
Where have we seen that before in relation to Verve? I can think of at least two places.

First, in Post #940 (link to IGN board), where we see Darik Alexander saying: "Don't even entertain the notion [that Vemma is a pyramid scheme] because you know it is not...and if you don't even entertain the notion, they [potential new recruits] will just be like, 'Oh damn, I feel like an idiot for even saying that question."

Second, in Post #944 (link to IGN board) where we see Darik Alexander saying: "The only way you are going to know if what I am telling you is really real is if you trust me."

So, to paraphrase those above quotations, we have Hill saying: don't be an idiot - don't rush into irrational decisions, and don't form irresponsible opinions without first doing research and educating yourself with the necessary facts.

Next, we have Alexander saying: don't even bother thinking about whether Verve is a pyramid scheme or not because the subject is not even open for discussion and you should feel stupid for even wondering about it. Further, we also have Alexander saying to trust him just because he said he should be trusted. No thinking is required, on the part of you, the Verve victim. From you nothing is required except for blind faith in the scammer who wants to take your money.

And most damning of all, on top of all that, we have Alexander (again in post #940) saying at about the 10:00 mark of his "home event" video: "Don't overcomplicate it. We got really rich because we didn't overcomplicate it. Tell everyone you know to come to the next event...Don't say 'Vemma.' Don't say 'Verve.' Say: 'This is going to change your freakin' life' - because it actually will, and I will guarantee that. You make sure they show up, I make sure they sign-up."

Translation from SlayerOfScams [what Alexander's words really mean]: "Successful professional scam artists like myself do not mention the words Vemma or Verve to potential new victims, because to do that would give them the power to research Vemma/Verve and realize that it is a scam and illegal pyramid scheme before we have had a chance to brainwash them at one of our events. Therefore, sell to everyone you know nothing but the dream of riches. Get them to come to one of our Vemma party events, and I will do the heavy-lifting to make sure that they become fully brainwashed and join the Vemma/Verve pyramid before they have had any chance to research or to think about it."



In other words, we have Darik Alexander proactively encouraging all the suckers who are lower than himself in the Verve pyramid to ask everyone they know to become (just as the other dupes who Alexander is talking to already have become) literal embodiment of Hill's twenty-ninth cause for failure at life.

To any Vemma/Verve victim, remember, Hill says you must have facts so that your brain can work properly. Are you not disturbed that you joined Vemma/Verve without first getting any relevant facts? Are you not disturbed that you are encouraging your friends and family members also to join Vemma/Verve without first getting any relevant facts? Are you not disturbed that no one has ever provided - not anywhere - even one single relevant fact to suggest that Vemma/Verve is anything other than a scam in the form of an illegal pyramid scheme?

Don't you find strange that wisdom from the main guru (Napoleon Hill) of one of your most notable cult masters (Bob Proctor) is condemning Vemma/Verve from beyond the grave?

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Originally appeared in IGN board by SlayerofScams, reposted with permission


P.S. from the MLM Skeptic... Many many years ago, I was between jobs and I answered someone's advertisement on Craigslist for internet related job. I was surprised he wants to meet me at my place, but he explained it's a work-at-home job. So I relented.

Turns out he doesn't have any job for me. He wants to recruit me for Quixtar (i.e. Amway online). 

I smiled, and proceed to waste his next half hour and still told him no. I figured, the best thing I can do is to waste as much of his time as he wasted mine, so that he has less time to waste someone else's time. 

Yes, I'm a sadistic bas****. And I believe I am totally justified because he advertised himself falsely. 

And apparently that's what Vemm-bots do: they teach people to do false advertisement. Like that guy who falsely advertised a job and I fell for it. 

Real douchebags, they are. 


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BREAKING NEWS: Canada launches formal probe into Herbalife

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According to New York Post, Canada's Competition Bureau has launched a formal inquiry into whether Herbalife operates as a pyramid scheme there.

CCB has no comment.

It is unknown if this had anything to do with Shawn Dahl's side business, which was a clone of his mother-in-law's business that was closed in Canada as a pyramid scheme.

http://nypost.com/2014/01/28/canadian-regulator-probing-herbalife/

MLM Dictionary: Omnitrition Case

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The term "Omnitrition Case" refers to "Webster vs. Omnitrition" class action lawsuit that was argued in 9th Circuit Court (of Appeals) in 1996.

Explaining the Case

(editor's note: I am not a lawyer, so you can read the full case, and summaries by several MLM attorneys and MLM critics near the end.)

Shaun Webster and Robert Ligon worked for Omnitrition until they, in 1992, decided to sue Omnitrition International, a MLM selling vitamins and such supplements, charging it as a pyramid scheme. The case gained "class action' status, as it sought relief for all similar reps who had allegedly been cheated by Omnitrition. Webster also charged Omnitrition with violations of securities law as well as violations of California's "endless chain" (pyramid scheme) laws, as well as various other laws such as RICO (racketeering), wire and mail fraud, etc.

At the time, Omnitrition's comp plan has distributors (no multi-level commssion), and various ranks of supervisor. Lowest rank, "bronze supervisor" requires $2000 order in one month, or $1000 orders over two consecutive months. The order goes to Omnitrition.

Omnitrition's defense is that it had followed Amway Safeguard Rules and thus it cannot be a pyramid scheme if Amway was ruled not a pyramid scheme by the FTC (per FTC vs. Amway).

District Court ruled in Omnitrition's favor in 1994, granting it a summary judgement ("Not pyramid scheme") and thus essentially dismissing the lawsuit. Webster appealed.

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals reviewed the case in 1996 and found that the district court have ruled the summary judgement in error in not considering sufficient evidence. However, it had also ruled that some additional charges brought against Omnitrition's lawyers and such are not valid and the summary judgement issued by lower court for those are affirmed.




The Omnitrition Defense

Omnitrition's defense at the 9th Circuit court centered on 3 themes:

1) Omnitrition does not charge money to become a distributor (lowest rank), therefore it does not meet test 1 of the Koscot Test (see Koscot test at end)

Court rejected this defense, because distributor is only a small portion of Omnitrition's affiliate ranks. If one must purchase a large order to get "full benefits" of the program, i.e. "rank of supervisor" for several thousand dollars, then "free" rank with limited benefits is of little to no consequence. Test 1 is indeed met.

Furthermore, since the commission is based on what the downline purchased from Omnitrition, rather than the amount SOLD by the downline (i.e. retail), it is NOT related to sales, and thus meets "test 4" of the Koscot test.

2) Omnitrition claimed Webster did not submit sufficient evidence that proves Omnitrition is a pyramid scheme.

Court also rejected this defense, pointing out that the way the compensation plan is structured, would encourage members to jump in and buy a large order ("start off as supervisor!") and thus profit the upline, thus people are encouraged to sell the opportunity, not the products, and that is a pyramid scheme.

3) Omnitrition claimed that it has adopted the Amway Safeguard Rules, which is sufficient to prove it is not a pyramid scheme.

Court rejected this defense, pointing out that pseudo-compliance does not ensure the company is not a pyramid scheme. Omnitrition's version of Amway Safeguard rules are actually WEAKER than Amway's own, and Amway's defense was only accepted after a full trial and audit of retail which proved that no inventory loading had occurred. Thus, mere aping Amway Safeguard rules is not sufficient defense.

Furthermore, Omnitrition only produced evidence of "Ten Customer Rule". Omnitrition produced no evidence that the 70% (recorder) rule was followed, merely distributors "self-certifying" that they will not order until they have retailed (or consumed) 70% of their inventory. Furthermore, Webster have produced proof that "self-consumption" (i.e. no retail sales) is enough to satisfy the 70% rule. The court ruled: " If Koscot is to have any teeth, such a sale (for self-consumption?) cannot satisfy the requirement that sales be to 'ultimate users' of a product. " Indeed, distributors who 'self-consume' are treated differently from retail customers, who enjoy a 30-day money back guarantee. Distributors have to accept the 90% refund (up to 3 months).

Court also found that the 90% refund for only 3 months is substantially weaker than Amway's buy-back.

There are a LOT of other technical details regarding a LOT of the other claims, like racketeering, securities fraud, and so on.

Notable Takeaways of the Ruling

a) The Court wrote: "The mere structure of the scheme suggests that Omnitrition's focus was in promoting the program rather than selling the products... The promise of lucrative rewards for recruiting others tends to induce participants to focus on the recruitment side of the business at the expense of their retail marketing efforts, making it unlikely that meaningful opportunities for retail sales will occur."

In other words, whether the compensation plan focuses on promoting retail vs. promoting the opportunity itself, determines whether the plan is a pyramid scheme. If a compensation plan is tilted toward recruiting, then it is probably a pyramid scheme as it is unlikely there will be any "meaningful retail sales".

Please also keep in mind that this is in ADDITION to the "Koscot Test", which the court also used in this decision.

This is interesting as this basically shows that the court knows about "product-based pyramid scheme" where "fake retail" was used to disguise the pyramid scheme from the Koscot Test. Basically, the court understands that if the plan encourages people to "buy products" just to participate in the compensation plan, and not for retail, it is a pyramid scheme.

b) The Court wrote: " If Koscot (test) is to have any teeth, such a sale cannot satisfy the requirement that sales be to 'ultimate users' of a product."

The sale aforementioned is the distributor claiming that s/he 'self-consumed' the products purchased "wholesale", thus acting as his/her own retail customer, and sold the inventory to him/her-self, to satisfy the 70% rule. This has several interpretations.

The "strict" interpretation, usually held by critics of MLM, is that this outlaws any"self-consumption" as "cheating" the Koscot test.

The "loose" interpretation, usually held by DSA, is that this irrelevant, since a self-consumer *is* an ultimate consumer.

However, this statement cannot be evaluated in isolation. This part is closing a loophole in understanding A and Koscot Test. It is possible for a scheme to adopt products as a disguise. Unless there is clear retail and the purpose for the wholesale purchase is to retail (and not merely to qualify oneself), the scheme is likely to be a pyramid scheme. Furthermore, you can't have a loophole that allows the distributor to "self-consume" the products, thus creating confusion on what is the real intent of the purchase. Is it for resale... or is it just to participate, i.e. "pay into the program"?

It really makes no sense for a distributor to consume his/her inventory any way. It's against any sound business principle. You can't sell what you consumed.

c) The Court also gave a new definition of inventory loading, "'Inventory loading' occurs when distributors make the minimum required purchases to receive recruitment-based bonuses without reselling the products to consumers.This definition is different from the Amway decision where FTC defined it as non-returnable purchases downline makes to enrich their uplines.

This definition is more applicable product-based pyramid schemes where distributors are simply encouraged to buy inventory, but not for actual retail sales. Furthermore, while the inventory can be returned, there is no incentive to actually do so, even if it results in financial loss, because it would undermine their plan to benefit from recruiting additional participants who were also encouraged to buy inventory (but not retail them).

d) The court, in analyzing comp plan, ruled that paying upline commission based on downline's purchase FROM Omnitrition satisfies Koscot Test item 4, commission is de facto based on recruitment, and NOT based on (retail) sales.

Aftermath of the Case

Omnitrition suffered a resounding loss in the case by the 9th Circuit Court. The case is sent back to the lower court to be retried. Before the district court can retry the case Omnitrition settled with the Webster, et. al. for undisclosed amounts.

DSA tried their best to minimize the impact of Omnitrition case. Their "virtual museum" does mention Omnitrition, but in a completely irrelevant manner, and in a single sentence that said nothing about its impact on the direct selling industry. Since then, it has basically ignored Omnitrition case altogether, mainly by claiming that the 9th Circuit Court had blundered, that why does MLM have to prove it is NOT a pyramid scheme over and over again. This type of view is best explained by MLM Attorney Jeff Babener in his view on Omnitrition (see reference for link):
The ninth circuit's approach is a serious threat to the direct selling industry because it creates a presumption of illegality of a multilevel marketing plan. The approach is inconsistent with the realities of the direct selling industry because it denies the ability of a multilevel marketing program to count personal or family use by distributors as "sales to the ultimate user." Almost all leading direct selling companies pay commissions based on the wholesale movement of product, and, recognize personal and family use by distributors as legitimate retail sales. Despite paying commissions on wholesale movement of product, the direct selling industry has protected its distributors from the abuses of inventory loading pyramid schemes by well-established buyback policies and the 70 percent rule.
The problem with Mr. Babener's explanation is "but everybody else does it too" is not a valid defense. Indeed, are there any "direct sales" companies where sales people are encouraged to sell to themselves? The self-consumption problem is unique to MLM.

Mr. Babener can't seem to recognize that he's trying to refight the last battle, the FTC vs. Amway battle back in 1979, in 1996. Comp plans change. Pyramid schemes evolve.  What worked as a defense back in 1979 may not work in 1996.

Furthermore, DSA has sought to end-run takeaway (b) above by asking various countries around the world, such as Canada, as well as several US states, to pass anti-pyramid laws that specifically exempted "self-consumption" to defining "retail sales" as both sales to public and sales to distributor him- or herself and his/her family.

 FTC itself has issued somewhat contradictory advisories since the Omnitrition case. In 2004 staff advisory opinion, it has refused to issued "hard" guidelines like "if >=X percent of sales is retail, then it's not a pyramid scheme". Their explanation is that the crooks will go right up to the edge and use other disguises to go past it. Instead, they prefer to analyze the comp plan itself and determine what is the intent of the distributors when they purchased inventory from the company?

In other words, just like takeaway (a) in the Omnitrition case above.

FTC's 2004 advisory opinion also explained that they understand modern pyramid schemes often *do* involve products and seemingly valid sales.

Why haven't there been more prosecutions?

One MLM critic explained that FTC is debating whether to take on Herbalife or any big MLM because FTC's resources are limited, and a fight with Herbalife, with couple billion in sales, would basically means they can't prosecute other cases for a while, and given the amount of resources Herbalife can dedicate to the fight (hire a legion of lawyers, PR campaign, etc.) the outcome is far from certain. And FTC, like all lawyers, hates to lose, as it would not be optimal spending of its limited resources. Same for all the other big MLMs.

Perhaps FTC is adopting the "kill a chicken to warn the monkey" approach...  But will the monkey listen? or adopt a "I'm too big to fail" attitude?


Current Situation

Omnitrition was not really mentioned in public media regarding prosecution of Burnlounge and FHTM (I haven't read all the court documents, but I would not be surprised if it's mentioned there).

Omnitrition was temporarily made popular in December 2012 when Bill Ackman started his epic short on Herbalife. However, it has again faded from public media since.


References About the Case

Full text of the trial from FindLaw

Analysis by Grimes and Reese, LLC, MLM Attorneys

Analysis by Robert Fitzpatrick, MLM Critic

Analysis by Jeff Babener, MLM attorneys

Analysis by Dr. Jon Taylor, MLM Critic
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