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- One of my wife's family members fell for the Vector Marketing scam
I just don't get how they trick anyone. I went to one of their meetings and it was just a total bongshow. Garbage everywhere. Drowning everyone in fake niceness. Could see the tape holding up signs, etc. They didn't even look professional yet everyone there but a few people were just eating it up.
Someone said I should try it for a job once when I was in between jobs and got all angry and self righteous when I said it was a scam.
Sigless user alert
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karlpilkington4 posted...
You can make money in MLM. It's not a scam. lmao
http://weareontherun.bandcamp.com
^^^^^ HEY! ^^^ LISTEN! ^^^^^ |
Smashingpmkns posted...
Dunno how people still fall for that s***, especially Vector. There's nothing to fall for. You sell products, and you make money. People in general simply can't sell (or persuade others) and therefore do not make any money. It's a commission based job. Now if you sell a product or get someone under you who sells, and you're not getting paid, then its a scam. But that's not what's actually happening in most every case.
Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"
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Smashingpmkns posted...
Dunno how people still fall for that s***, especially Vector. Some people, despite having almost all information available and curated for free in their pocket, just don't bother to take a minute to scan for criticisms.
[break the meta]
https://youtu.be/Acn5IptKWQU |
I have a friend who is into Herbalife and she makes some really good money. More than double the living wage. I'm not sure how much but she's really really successful and has a lot of other people working for her now. It's one of those things that is amazing for a very particular sort of person. Like very outgoing people who manage to really influence the people around them and are able to manage themselves. It's definitely not a business for your average Joe. Plus, she lost a lot of weight and looked amazing after she did Herbalife for some months.
Most people should just stay away from it, tho, unless they like the products, in which case just buy them, but don't quit your dayjob.
Dear lord, Spyker just ripped his entire life apart in nothing more than a few paragraphs. Ouch... - RexSilver
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ThePrinceFish posted...
"It's not a scam as long as you're the kind of person that can scam others harder than the jerk that got you involved scams you." Lol pretty much. There are plenty of real sales jobs with hourly wages and benefits, idk how MLMs are so successful in recruiting people
The Legend is True!
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ThePrinceFish posted...
"It's not a scam as long as you're the kind of person that can scam others harder than the jerk that got you involved scams you." If you're selling a product that works and people buy it, then I don't think it's a scam. I think the Herbalife diet works. I'm not sure how, but people who follow it strictly get amazing results.
Dear lord, Spyker just ripped his entire life apart in nothing more than a few paragraphs. Ouch... - RexSilver
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Mister_Spyker posted...
I have a friend who is into Herbalife and she makes some really good money. More than double the living wage. I'm not sure how much but she's really really successful and has a lot of other people working for her now. It's one of those things that is amazing for a very particular sort of person. Like very outgoing people who manage to really influence the people around them and are able to manage themselves. It's definitely not a business for your average Joe. Plus, she lost a lot of weight and looked amazing after she did Herbalife for some months. Good post. It takes a mental shift to work on commission and essentially be on your own, selling. Most people can't handle that. But that doesn't make it a scam. A lot of people simply don't have the skills required to succeed in that business model. The people who do, can flourish.
Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"
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karlpilkington4 posted...
MC_BatCommander posted...karlpilkington4 posted...show hidden quote(s) How about you explain in detail how it’s not a scam first
I could see you, but I couldn't hear you You were holding your hat in the breeze Turning away from me In this moment you were stolen...
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thronedfire2 posted...
Do you believe the person you're speaking to is sincere?
This is a mobile account, forgive any errors. ~DYL~
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTEX3YdEi7s |
Smashingpmkns posted...
Can't think of many real commission jobs that require sales people themselves recruiting in order to stay afloat. There's a documentary on Herbalife called Betting on Zero that goes into detail on how many lives have been ruined. Yeah, made by a guy who hates Herbalife.
Dear lord, Spyker just ripped his entire life apart in nothing more than a few paragraphs. Ouch... - RexSilver
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karlpilkington4 posted...
MC_BatCommander posted...karlpilkington4 posted...show hidden quote(s) It's a few people profiting by mass recruitment of naive and untrained "contractors". Basically you "hire" anyone that walks in the door, give them minimal (and unpaid) sales training, then have them pay you a "deposit" on the product. Any industry where 90%+ of the employees don't make money is a scam in my book
The Legend is True!
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thronedfire2 posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...MC_BatCommander posted...show hidden quote(s) You sell their products, they pay you. If you get other people under you, and they sell, the company gives you a percentage of their sales too. How is any of that a scam?
Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"
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Mister_Spyker posted...
Smashingpmkns posted...Can't think of many real commission jobs that require sales people themselves recruiting in order to stay afloat. There's a documentary on Herbalife called Betting on Zero that goes into detail on how many lives have been ruined. It followed a Harvard graduate hedge fund manager, it was made by the dude who made Darfur Now.
Clean Butt Crew
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MC_BatCommander posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...MC_BatCommander posted...show hidden quote(s) That doesn't make it a scam. There is a definition of scam, and "your book" is irrelevant to the actual definition. The amount of people failing at something is irrelevant to what makes something a scam or not. If you sell their products, they pay you.
Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"
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Mlms are no different than regular jobs, the thing about doing mlm that differs from doing other jobs is that you can build more skills doing mlm than being a cashier for instance. So the trade off you you don't get a comfy per hour rate cuz it's based on performance but you build skills that make you extremely valuable to almost any employer so if it doesn't work out you can go back to getting paid hourly or salary but with the mlm psychology to make you a more valuable employee.
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karlpilkington4 posted...
MC_BatCommander posted...karlpilkington4 posted...show hidden quote(s) Whatever you say man, I don't agree with you at all Any company that uses misleading recruiting tactics to make money definitely falls under the definition of scam, and Vector is for sure one of those. Idk about every MLM but Vector absolutely is one
The Legend is True!
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I've seen enough dudes renting fancy cars and clothes to project an aura of success to groups of rubes, I mean prospective "partners", to know that multilevel marketing is the biggest f***ing scam imaginable.
Dielman on Rivers: "I've tried to get him to say s--- or f--- and all he'll ever do is say 'Golly gee, I can't do that"
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? |
MC_BatCommander posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...MC_BatCommander posted...show hidden quote(s) It's literally the definition of the word. There's nothing to disagree with. When you signup, you are told how to get paid and what's required. You sell their products, you get paid. You get people to sell on your team, you get paid. Just because people can't sell, doesn't make it a scam.
Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"
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DarkRoast posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...You can make money in MLM. It's not a scam. That's not true at all, and even if it were, its not a scam if the company outlines that requirement in the beginning. Maybe learn what the word scam means.
Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"
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Master_Bass posted...
Remember kids, it's not a real job if they have you buy products from them first. You mean kind of how you have to pay for bs certificates, degrees and further education for other jobs? LOL |
“The loss rate for MLMs is at least 99%. This means that less than one in 100 MLMparticipants make a clear profit, and at least 99 out of 100 participants actually losemoney,” Taylor reports. Less than one in one hundred. Your odds of sleeping through the night with three-month-old triplets are higher.Aug 17, 2017
https://due.com/blog/3-mind-blowing-statistics-about-mlms/ 99% of MLM participants lose money According to research at the FTC, a whopping 99% of recruited sellers lose money in an MLM venture. That means just 1% actually turn a profit. That is generally just those at the very top of a recruitment structure. Because recruiters earn from their own sales and the sales of everyone they recruit, and their recruits, and so one, those at the top can earn a profit. But with 99% of people losing money, it’s hard to see why anyone would join this type of company. It’s hard to succeed in any business, but the success rate is well over the 1% you see in MLMs. The same FTC report explains that 39% of legitimate small businesses ultimately earn a profit over time. That’s still less than a 50/50 success rate, but about 39x better than an MLM. Before starting in any business, regardless of the product or service, do your research and find hard numbers on your odds for success. There is risk in starting any business venture. As long as you understand and can afford those risks, that’s okay. However, you should never start a business where the odds of success are better at a Vegas slot machine. 95% quit within ten years What happens in a business model where everyone loses money? Everyone quits. Well, not quite everyone. But close to it. The same FTC report from Jon Taylor explains that 95% of MLM participants quit within ten years. Around 30% of all small businesses survive at least ten years, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. That means the typical small business has 6x the longevity, when measured by who’s around after 10 years, of MLMs. While it makes sense that people would get want to move on from some businesses after a period of time, the rate at which people flee MLMs are a testament to the 1% profitability rate above. According to another study, at least half of participants quit within one year. All businesses take a lot of work and there is no quick and easy path to success. If there were, everyone would be doing it!
Well allons-y, Alonso!
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I used to be part of Primerica for a few months. Went to all these meetings and whatnot thinking I could make money. The words they used and the way they said them were so pretty I was just like "f*** it, I'll try this". What I felt so uncomfortable about it was that as soon as I joined, they asked me for all my contacts and to schedule meetings with them. Needless to say, most of the people I contacted warned me offside not to deal with them so of course I couldn't produce results. I didn't listen and found myself miserable for the next few months.
Is the potential to make money there? Of course but you have to either have the right attitude/mindset to grow/improve and really commit to it. I had neither, felt it just wasn't for me, and worst of all, felt like they were badgering me WAY too much for someone that didn't get results, and just stopped answering calls until my license expired. I'm all for positive energy support but it was so damn suffocating especially since I found no passion for the work. My trainer went as far as thinking of me as a little brother even though I only knew him for 2 months. Yea. No. Are such models scams? I'd imagine businesses for the most part follow a pyramidic model. The reason I say Primerica was a scam (at least the branch I worked for) was due to my personal experience and how I just ate up all these fancy way of wording things differently just to increase their marketability. Some people have the drive to succeed and I'm glad I realized before I spent too much money/gas that I didn't mind not succeeding in that company. .... TDLR... i don't know why I ranted on that lol but it was one of the most defeating times of my life.
3DS: 0275-8008-3626
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karlpilkington4 posted...
MC_BatCommander posted...karlpilkington4 posted...show hidden quote(s) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyramid_scheme
It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kv |
ArchiePeck posted...
It's exploitative, but it's not a "scam" - no-one is getting cheated out of anything. If you are an extremely good and charismatic seller you will be able to make good money. Most people aren't, which is why I agree that seling them the idea is exploitative. I agree with this for some companies. They target poor people who definitely don't have the skills or mindset to do this
Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"
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ArchiePeck posted...
It's exploitative, but it's not a "scam" - no-one is getting cheated out of anything. If you are an extremely good and charismatic seller you will be able to make good money. Most people aren't, which is why I agree that seling them the idea is exploitative. No, even if you sell balls to the wall, you won't make jack. The only way to actually make money in MLM is to recruit tons and tons of salespeople under you and get a cut of their sales (and then inherit their customers when they quit)
Well allons-y, Alonso!
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Not calling it a scam is semantics. But it's far from the only scam-like entity in the job sphere. Everybody's trying to get as much free money as possible from others looking to get as much free money as possible
"Iwata was awesome" - Mr. Nintendo
https://i.imgtc.com/7dRrfE1.jpg |
Tyranthraxus posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...MC_BatCommander posted...show hidden quote(s) None of that proved it was a scam. Nice attempt. Maybe try harder than a copy/paste next time.
Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"
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Most of it is a scam because the products and services they sell are trash. My bro fell for one of them where he sold basically an AAA like car service for half the price of AAA. But if you look up the actual service it was f***ing garbage. Most of the time you had to pay upfront for the service and the fake AAA company would reimburse you (they never did)
Literally tried to get me to sign up and I told him it was a scam. He swore to me it wasn’t. Two months later he was like “well I only lost $250 so it wasn’t really a scam” 🤦♂
@macdamurderer
GT: Mac Da Murderer |
karlpilkington4 posted...
You can make money in MLM. It's not a scam. Of course you would say that
ImgTC. https://discord.gg/PDTUWUC
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lincoln002 posted...
Master_Bass posted...Remember kids, it's not a real job if they have you buy products from them first. At least a lot of those will get you a decent job. All you get with an MLM is debt and some hideous leggings with essential oils smeared on them.
Many Bothans died to bring you this post.
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- Boards
- Current Events
- One of my wife's family members fell for the Vector Marketing scam
- Boards
- Current Events
- One of my wife's family members fell for the Vector Marketing scam
DarkRoast posted...ArchiePeck posted...
It's exploitative, but it's not a "scam" - no-one is getting cheated out of anything. If you are an extremely good and charismatic seller you will be able to make good money. Most people aren't, which is why I agree that seling them the idea is exploitative.
No, even if you sell balls to the wall, you won't make jack.
Untrue.
Understand how MLM businesses are different from pyramid schemes. In a legal MLM business, you sell legitimate products that people genuinely want for a fair price. You can make money just by selling the product. You don’t have to recruit others into the business to make money, even though you may be encouraged to do so to earn more money. MLM businesses are not about taking advantage of anybody. Nobody has to lose money in order for you to make money.[2]
This article was co-authored by Michael R. Lewis. Michael R. Lewis is a retired corporate executive, entrepreneur, and investment advisor in Texas. He has over 40 years of experience in Business & Finance.
There are 27 references cited in this article, which can be found at the bottom of the page.
https://www.wikihow.com/Make-Money-with-MLMIs This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"Bishop9800 posted...radical rhino posted...
Holy s*** this karl guy is so obviously part of a MLM company and desperately doesn’t want to admit that he was scammed. Lol!
No, I simply have a pet-peeve for people who spread misinformation. No matter what it is.
It's a trait, I would love to get rid of.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"The entire MLM system is built not on selling the "product", but instead recruiting other people who then buy the "product" from you to sell to people they recruit or else just throw their money away filling their garage with worthless garbage. It is a scam.Aeris dies if she takes more damage than her current HP - Panthera
https://signavatar.com/26999_s.pngMaster_Bass posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
In a legal MLM business, you sell legitimate products that people genuinely want for a fair price.
Lmao, no one wants the vast majority of MLM products.
The product is really just a formality, the actual money comes from having recruits.
Multi-level marketing is a legal scam. If there were any other industry with 99% of its employees making $0 or less, that industry would be regulated faster than anything.
and the worst part is, the people who defend it the strongest are the ones who get screwed over the hardest. MLM companies deliberately have a cult-like design, filled with motivational seminars and slogans.Well allons-y, Alonso!Master_Bass posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
In a legal MLM business, you sell legitimate products that people genuinely want for a fair price.
Lmao, no one wants the vast majority of MLM products.
This isnt true at all. Even if it was, legitimacy has nothing to do with desire.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...Tyranthraxus posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...
show hidden quote(s)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyramid_scheme
None of that proved it was a scam.
Nice attempt. Maybe try harder than a copy/paste next time.
I mean I don't really think you fully understand the meaning of the word scam or what vector marketing does.
You don't sell knives for vector marketing. You buy knives from them and then sell them on your own and keep the profit. They don't care whether or not you actually do any work because they've already made their money from you. The promises of riches come from your ability to buy into the scam, and then later recruit people to also buy into the scam. The more people you recruit into the scam, the more money you make. While they tell you everyone can do this, the fact is, most people cannot. As in they have no ability to do such a thing because they lack proper business contacts. They deliberately target people of early college ages because of their poor judgement and high level of confidence. They target people that they know will fail because they don't care they already got your money.
Thus, at the end of your vector marketing career, you're left with nothing but debt and a bunch of knives that you couldn't sell and you never get any of the s*** they promised you. And you probably pissed off some of your family and friends trying to sell knives to them in the process.
This is a scam. The only way you can make money off it is if you scam other people. You cannot make money just by selling knives, and in fact, have to pay to do it.
My brother got suckered into it for around 2 years.It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kv(To karl) You say that but I've interviewed and worked with (not for) MLM companies that recruit idiot students who aren't aware of how actual more legitimate companies are run. They're put in door-to-door sales without calling it door-to-door on a technical level, no leads, no pay or bonus unless they're able to aggressively put people in plans that are hard to get out. You can see in a lot of testimonials that these kinds of companies like doing s*** like not cancelling plans to deceased individuals even after reports of the person's passing to the company or taking advantage of the elderly and convincing them the service is right for them until their family intervenes.
These "legitimate" products are also legitimate in a technical sense. They're usually extravagant and overpriced that 99% of the world won't need, but salesmen are basically tasked to convince otherwise
They're always just skirting the edges of legality and hiding in plain sight arguing with sophistry and semantics to justify what is basically morally wrong in just about everybody else's eyes.
But what does it matter to people like them or you? As long as you think of yourself as right, it's fine regardless of who's affected right?"Iwata was awesome" - Mr. Nintendo
https://i.imgtc.com/7dRrfE1.jpgkarlpilkington4 posted...Bishop9800 posted...
radical rhino posted...
show hidden quote(s)
No, I simply have a pet-peeve for people who spread misinformation. No matter what it is.
So you must really hate yourself....Tyranthraxus posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
Tyranthraxus posted...
show hidden quote(s)
None of that proved it was a scam.
Nice attempt. Maybe try harder than a copy/paste next time.
I mean I don't really think you fully understand the meaning of the word scam or what vector marketing does.
You don't sell knives for vector marketing. You buy knives from them and then sell them on your own and keep the profit. They don't care whether or not you actually do any work because they've already made their money from you. The promises of riches come from your ability to buy into the scam, and then later recruit people to also buy into the scam. The more people you recruit into the scam, the more money you make. While they tell you everyone can do this, the fact is, most people cannot. As in they have no ability to do such a thing because they lack proper business contacts. They deliberately target people of early college ages because of their poor judgement and high level of confidence. They target people that they know will fail because they don't care they already got your money.
Thus, at the end of your vector marketing career, you're left with nothing but debt and a bunch of knives that you couldn't sell and you never get any of the s*** they promised you. And you probably pissed off some of your family and friends trying to sell knives to them in the process.
This is a scam. The only way you can make money off it is if you scam other people. You cannot make money just by selling knives, and in fact, have to pay to do it.
My brother got suckered into it for around 2 years.
Not to mention, they fail to address the simple fact that we no longer live in a world that has any interest in peer-to-peer marketing. Nobody wants to buy some overpriced knives from a friend, they'll go to Amazon. Multi-level marketing products aren't designed to be sold. In fact, they're designed and priced to be not sold.
All the money comes from recruitment videos, seminars, etc.Well allons-y, Alonso!Tyranthraxus posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
Tyranthraxus posted...
show hidden quote(s)
None of that proved it was a scam.
Nice attempt. Maybe try harder than a copy/paste next time.
I mean I don't really think you fully understand the meaning of the word scam or what vector marketing does.
You don't sell knives for vector marketing. You buy knives from them and then sell them on your own and keep the profit. They don't care whether or not you actually do any work because they've already made their money from you. The promises of riches come from your ability to buy into the scam, and then later recruit people to also buy into the scam. The more people you recruit into the scam, the more money you make. While they tell you everyone can do this, the fact is, most people cannot. As in they have no ability to do such a thing because they lack proper business contacts. They deliberately target people of early college ages because of their poor judgement and high level of confidence. They target people that they know will fail because they don't care they already got your money.
Thus, at the end of your vector marketing career, you're left with nothing but debt and a bunch of knives that you couldn't sell and you never get any of the s*** they promised you. And you probably pissed off some of your family and friends trying to sell knives to them in the process.
This is a scam. The only way you can make money off it is if you scam other people. You cannot make money just by selling knives, and in fact, have to pay to do it.
My brother got suckered into it for around 2 years.
Nothing you outlined is a scam, even if you managed to incorrectly insert it multiple times into your post. If you can't sell their products, then of course you wont make money. How the f*** does your inability to sell make it a scam? Please explain that simple point.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"Why the f*** have y'all spent this many posts feeding that guy?
How ironic that this happens in a topic about people not realizing they're being fooled.DarkRoast posted...Master_Bass posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...
show hidden quote(s)
Lmao, no one wants the vast majority of MLM products.
The product is really just a formality, the actual money comes from having recruits.
Multi-level marketing is a legal scam. If there were any other industry with 99% of its employees making $0 or less, that industry would be regulated faster than anything.
and the worst part is, the people who defend it the strongest are the ones who get screwed over the hardest. MLM companies deliberately have a cult-like design, filled with motivational seminars and slogans.
You ever hear the FTC or whoever's investigation of MLMs? They basically described it as a pyramid scheme, even used the term pyramidal structure, but refused to call it such."All I have is my balls and my word, and I don't break them for anyone!"-Tony Montanalegendarylemur posted...(To karl) You say that but I've interviewed and worked with (not for) MLM companies that recruit idiot students who aren't aware of how actual more legitimate companies are run. They're put in door-to-door sales without calling it door-to-door on a technical level, no leads, no pay or bonus unless they're able to aggressively put people in plans that are hard to get out. You can see in a lot of testimonials that these kinds of companies like doing s*** like not cancelling plans to deceased individuals even after reports of the person's passing to the company or taking advantage of the elderly and convincing them the service is right for them until their family intervenes.
These "legitimate" products are also legitimate in a technical sense. They're usually extravagant and overpriced that 99% of the world won't need, but salesmen are basically tasked to convince otherwise
They're always just skirting the edges of legality and hiding in plain sight arguing with sophistry and semantics to justify what is basically morally wrong in just about everybody else's eyes.
But what does it matter to people like them or you? As long as you think of yourself as right, it's fine regardless of who's affected right?
Being "overpriced" can apply to most things. Most jewelry (diamonds) are completely overpriced. Designer clothes? Overpriced. It costs 2 dollars to make jeans ,and they sell "designer" jeans for $300 at the mall.
Again, that doesn't make something a "scam". Are some companies more manipulative than others? Sure, but that doesnt make the entire industry a scam.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...Nothing you outlined is a scam, even if you managed to incorrectly insert it multiple times into your post. If you can't sell their products, then of course you wont make money. How the f*** does your inability to sell make it a scam? Please explain that simple point.
I literally just told you. The guy who recruited you is the one who makes the money at your expense.
In a normal job if I'm hired for sales and can't sell s***, the company loses money and the time they wasted having me as a salesperson. In Vector, that's like the 2nd best case scenario.It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kvUnholyMudcrab posted...Why the f*** have y'all spent this many posts feeding that guy?
How ironic that this happens in a topic about people not realizing they're being fooled.
For real.
People in this topic is why mlms are still a thing.This is a mobile account, forgive any errors. ~DYL~
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTEX3YdEi7sTyranthraxus posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
Nothing you outlined is a scam, even if you managed to incorrectly insert it multiple times into your post. If you can't sell their products, then of course you wont make money. How the f*** does your inability to sell make it a scam? Please explain that simple point.
I literally just told you. The guy who recruited you is the one who makes the money at your expense.
In a normal job if I'm hired for sales and can't sell s***, the company loses money and the time they wasted having me as a salesperson. In Vector, that's like the 2nd best case scenario.
#1. If I'm recruited, and I sell, I get paid
#2 At a commission sales job, if you don't make money, the company doesn't get paid either. Most MLM's simply requires you to pay their membership fee to join and they send you the product as part of it. This is all upfront before signing up. None of it is a scam.
So, no you haven't "told" me anything.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"I wasn't aware Proudclad was an MLM shill, but I'm also not surprised in the least.Aeris dies if she takes more damage than her current HP - Panthera
https://signavatar.com/26999_s.pngBLAKUboy posted...I wasn't aware Proudclad was an MLM shill, but I'm also not surprised in the least.
it's not about MLM, it's about his weird bootstrapping worldview that comes through in a very proudcladian wayBut to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you.Balrog0 posted...and you're still trying to convince people you're not proudclad
So karl is proudclad. Guess that explains why he picks things that people largely agree are bad to defend.Balrog0 posted...BLAKUboy posted...
I wasn't aware Proudclad was an MLM shill, but I'm also not surprised in the least.
it's not about MLM, it's about his weird bootstrapping worldview that comes through in a very proudcladian way
There's nothing weird about thinking people should work for their success, and not get handouts for doing nothing of real value. To think this type of view point is specific to one person is ridiculous.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"MC_BatCommander posted...I didn't know that was proudclad lmao
It is an incredibly recent revelation. Like literally just today.
In fairness, the account is usually in Purg for transphobic stuff.Aeris dies if she takes more damage than her current HP - Panthera
https://signavatar.com/26999_s.pngI was desperate for work and got suckered into driving an hour for a “job interview” that ended up being a group presentation for a life insurance sales pyramid scheme. I was one of like three people that hadn’t left by the end, so the guy tried to get $200 out of me to get me started.
Within a couple weeks, I moved ~3,000 miles across the country to job hunt there instead.karlpilkington4 posted...Balrog0 posted...
BLAKUboy posted...
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it's not about MLM, it's about his weird bootstrapping worldview that comes through in a very proudcladian way
There's nothing weird about thinking people should work for their success, and not get handouts for doing nothing of real value. To think this type of view point is specific to one person is ridiculous.
On the contrary, I think people should be paid for their work.
But as a doctor I just get handouts soWell allons-y, Alonso!BLAKUboy posted...MC_BatCommander posted...
I didn't know that was proudclad lmao
It is an incredibly recent revelation. Like literally just today.
In fairness, the account is usually in Purg for transphobic stuff.
yeah, proudclad never strike me as transphobic, but his last account was too focus on calling everyone a communist that he never laid any opinions about that kind of stuff.DarkRoast posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
Balrog0 posted...
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There's nothing weird about thinking people should work for their success, and not get handouts for doing nothing of real value. To think this type of view point is specific to one person is ridiculous.
On the contrary, I think people should be paid for their work.
But as a doctor I just get handouts so
What type of handouts?Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...Tyranthraxus posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...
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I literally just told you. The guy who recruited you is the one who makes the money at your expense.
In a normal job if I'm hired for sales and can't sell s***, the company loses money and the time they wasted having me as a salesperson. In Vector, that's like the 2nd best case scenario.
#1. If I'm recruited, and I sell, I get paid
#2 At a commission sales job, if you don't make money, the company doesn't get paid either. Most MLM's simply requires you to pay their membership fee to join and they send you the product as part of it. This is all upfront before signing up. None of it is a scam.
So, no you haven't "told" me anything.
#1 I just told you that no, you don't get paid. You have to buy their kits and seminars which puts you into the red, then sell it just to break even and maybe end up with a little extra pocket change. My brother worked all day and after his expenses he made an average of $2 an hour, except less than that really since he was never reimbursed for any of the gas he spent driving to customers locations. The only person who gets paid is the person you buy the kits / seminars from.
#2 Vector Marketing is not a commission based job. You have to buy the material to sell, and then you have to sell it. You don't get a commission. You get exactly what you sell. They call it commission but the fact is you are just a reseller, and a terrible one. They are selling you products for retail prices that you have to turn around and sell at a markup.
At the end of the day Vector Marketing promises that you can become rich but you can't actually get that way unless you scam other people into the s*** that you had to do starting out.It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kvTmaster148 posted...BLAKUboy posted...
MC_BatCommander posted...
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It is an incredibly recent revelation. Like literally just today.
In fairness, the account is usually in Purg for transphobic stuff.
yeah, proudclad never strike me as transphobic, but his last account was too focus on calling everyone a communist that he never laid any opinions about that kind of stuff.
before that it was being atheist and before that it was being super christian
the fact that the emphasis keeps changing and isnt principled at all but the oddly intense love for anything that can be construed as hard work and dedication or w/e even if it's obviously bad has been consistent through all of these phasesBut to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you.Tyranthraxus posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
Tyranthraxus posted...
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#1. If I'm recruited, and I sell, I get paid
#2 At a commission sales job, if you don't make money, the company doesn't get paid either. Most MLM's simply requires you to pay their membership fee to join and they send you the product as part of it. This is all upfront before signing up. None of it is a scam.
So, no you haven't "told" me anything.
#1 I just told you that no, you don't get paid. You have to buy their kits and seminars which puts you into the red, then sell it just to break even and maybe end up with a little extra pocket change. My brother worked all day and after his expenses he made an average of $2 an hour, except less than that really since he was never reimbursed for any of the gas he spent driving to customers locations. The only person who gets paid is the person you buy the kits / seminars from.
#2 Vector Marketing is not a commission based job. You have to buy the material to sell, and then you have to sell it. You don't get a commission. You get exactly what you sell. They call it commission but the fact is you are just a reseller, and a terrible one. They are selling you products for retail prices that you have to turn around and sell at a markup.
At the end of the day Vector Marketing promises that you can become rich but you can't actually get that way unless you scam other people into the s*** that you had to do starting out.
Again nothing you said makes it a scam, you just keep talking in circles.
"You have to buy a membership so you're in the red"
Do they still pay you when you sell their products?
"Yes"
Oh...so it's not a scam
And the majority of MLM companies give you a special link to send your customers when they buy online. You don't need to buy the product to sell it. That's blatantly false as a MLM standard.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"radical rhino posted...Holy s*** this karl guy is so obviously part of a MLM company and desperately doesn’t want to admit that he was scammed. Lol!
its just his gimmick
basically any topic where the prevailing opinion is siding in one direction, he advocates the opposite.
hes a contrarian troll; its weird.-Only dead fish swim with the current
http://error1355.com/ce/spudger.htmlspudger posted...radical rhino posted...
Holy s*** this karl guy is so obviously part of a MLM company and desperately doesn’t want to admit that he was scammed. Lol!
its just his gimmick
basically any topic where the prevailing opinion is siding in one direction, he advocates the opposite.
hes a contrarian troll; its weird.
Also apparently sells knivesspudger posted...radical rhino posted...
Holy s*** this karl guy is so obviously part of a MLM company and desperately doesn’t want to admit that he was scammed. Lol!
its just his gimmick
basically any topic where the prevailing opinion is siding in one direction, he advocates the opposite.
hes a contrarian troll; its weird.
He's pretty dedicated. Even I have my limits.Well allons-y, Alonso!spudger posted...radical rhino posted...
Holy s*** this karl guy is so obviously part of a MLM company and desperately doesn’t want to admit that he was scammed. Lol!
its just his gimmick
basically any topic where the prevailing opinion is siding in one direction, he advocates the opposite.
hes a contrarian troll; its weird.
I only enter discussions on things that I know to be right (or strongly believe to be). Being contrarian for contrarians sake is not what I do.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...I only enter discussions on things that I know to be right (or strongly believe to be)
I have never seen you be right about anything, but at least you cover your tracks there.- Boards
- Current Events
- One of my wife's family members fell for the Vector Marketing scam
- Boards
- Current Events
- One of my wife's family members fell for the Vector Marketing scam
Mister_Spyker posted...It's one of those things that is amazing for a very particular sort of person
Pretty much this. I know a kid who grew up with my on my street who was really shy, but really humble. Turns out he can sell and influence like a mad man, and now he's making bank with amway, or whatever they call themselves these days.
He got me to try it for a few months, but I just didn't have the people skills (lets alone the network of friends/acquaintances) to get out and put in the necessary hustle. When I first started, my boss at work was like "oh s***, I love the soda they sell... I'll take two boxes!" and I was like "oh damn I'm off to a great start!" but then he was set with those two boxes for a while and I ended up changing jobs.
I tried talking to a few people but just had this feeling of guilt the whole time... that, or they were already trying to sell products of their own! haha. When I asked the guy, the kid I mentioned earlier, how he was so successful... he was simply like "man I just see this business as getting to hang out with friends all day... I get to go out and talk to friends and make new ones" and I was sitting there the whole time thinking "I dont want friends I want money" which showed me that I just didn't have the mindset for it and I left short thereafter.
If you're a people person you really can make bank with this stuff."With cheese in either hand, anything is possible"karlpilkington4 posted...spudger posted...
radical rhino posted...
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its just his gimmick
basically any topic where the prevailing opinion is siding in one direction, he advocates the opposite.
hes a contrarian troll; its weird.
I only enter discussions on things that I know to be right (or strongly believe to be). Being contrarian for contrarians sake is not what I do.
Only fools are certain.Well allons-y, Alonso!DarkRoast posted...spudger posted...
radical rhino posted...
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its just his gimmick
basically any topic where the prevailing opinion is siding in one direction, he advocates the opposite.
hes a contrarian troll; its weird.
He's pretty dedicated. Even I have my limits.
super dedicated. if it wasn't so annoying i'd be impressed.-Only dead fish swim with the current
http://error1355.com/ce/spudger.htmlDarkRoast posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
spudger posted...
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I only enter discussions on things that I know to be right (or strongly believe to be). Being contrarian for contrarians sake is not what I do.
Only fools are certain.
I'm pretty certain the sky is blue, that the earth is round, flossing is healthy, etc. Give me evidence that convinces me otherwise, and I will change my mind, but until then, I'm going to be pretty f***ing certain of certain things.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted..."You have to buy a membership so you're in the red"
Do they still pay you when you sell their products?
"Yes"
No. They literally don't.
karlpilkington4 posted...And the majority of MLM companies give you a special link to send your customers when they buy online. You don't need to buy the product to sell it. That's blatantly false as a MLM standard.
Okay but that's not what vector marketing does. They make you buy both the product and these imaginary pep talks.It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kvspudger posted...DarkRoast posted...
spudger posted...
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He's pretty dedicated. Even I have my limits.
super dedicated. if it wasn't so pathetic i'd be impressed.
FTFYI don't think Karl is proudclad either btw
Clad seems to have just given up and fallen off the radar because he lost both his mains and can't last 5 minutes on the random old accounts he borrows from other people without getting banned
Karl is mega lol in this topic though. Probably buyers remorse for those $1000 knivesYou can't trust anybody
if you can't trust number oneConflict posted...I don't think Karl is proudclad either btw
I agree.
I don't know what happened to him but he's not karlIt says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kvkarlpilkington4 posted...Tyranthraxus posted...
Okay but that's not what vector marketing does. They make you buy both the product and these imaginary pep talks.
Fair enough, either way its not a scam if they tell you that upfront.
I mean they don't.
They tell you where you start and they tell you what the top of the pyramid looks like. They tell you all the gilded parts and none of the s*** that you have to scrub to get there.
It's like "Hey, you want a job helping out with preschool kids? Pays 200k a year!" "ok seems sweet money" first day on the job the kids are surrounded by tigers and you find out later that this is a daily thing.It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kvkarlpilkington4 posted...It's a commission based job.
If it's a commission-based job, then the salesman would never have to put up his own money to get the product, dude.[Feminist][CisGender][Straight Supporter][Non-Binary]
I'm not Ashamed to Dress 'like a Woman' because I don't think it's Shameful to be a Woman. ~Iggy Pop~Tyranthraxus posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
Tyranthraxus posted...
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Fair enough, either way its not a scam if they tell you that upfront.
I mean they don't.
They tell you where you start and they tell you what the top of the pyramid looks like. They tell you all the gilded parts and none of the s*** that you have to scrub to get there.
It's like "Hey, you want a job helping out with preschool kids? Pays 200k a year!" "ok seems sweet money" first day on the job the kids are surrounded by tigers and you find out later that this is a daily thing.
I just looked up Vector Marketing, and they arent even an MLM company. They are a direct sales company.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...Tyranthraxus posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...
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I mean they don't.
They tell you where you start and they tell you what the top of the pyramid looks like. They tell you all the gilded parts and none of the s*** that you have to scrub to get there.
It's like "Hey, you want a job helping out with preschool kids? Pays 200k a year!" "ok seems sweet money" first day on the job the kids are surrounded by tigers and you find out later that this is a daily thing.
I just looked up Vector Marketing, and they arent even an MLM company. They are a direct sales company.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_Marketing
Vector Marketing is a multi-level marketing subsidiary company and the domestic sales arm of Cutco Corporation, an Olean, New York-based cutlery manufacturer.[1][2]Well allons-y, Alonso!karlpilkington4 posted...You can make money in MLM. It's not a scam.
Sounds like Stockholm syndromeDarkRoast posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
Tyranthraxus posted...
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I just looked up Vector Marketing, and they arent even an MLM company. They are a direct sales company.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_Marketing
Vector Marketing is a multi-level marketing subsidiary company and the domestic sales arm of Cutco Corporation, an Olean, New York-based cutlery manufacturer.[1][2]
Vector Marketing is a little different in that they claim not to be an MLM at all. According to them, their reps can earn incentives and prized for recruiting new sales reps, but they don’t get paid on a multi-level downline.
https://mlmcompanies.org/vector-marketing/
Maybe know what you're talking about before linking to wikipedia.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"YookaLaylee posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
You can make money in MLM. It's not a scam.
Sounds like Stockholm syndrome
Sunk cost fallacy is probably more apt.Aeris dies if she takes more damage than her current HP - Panthera
https://signavatar.com/26999_s.pngBLAKUboy posted...YookaLaylee posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...
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Sounds like Stockholm syndrome
Sunk cost fallacy is probably more apt.
Sunk cost of what? What did I buy? I'm curious.
NB4 some lame joke or backpeddle.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...lydiaquayle posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...
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If it's a commission-based job, then the salesman would never have to put up his own money to get the product, dude.
Says who? The world police of commission jobs?
I mean, that's literally how a commission-based salary works. You work directly for a company, you sell a product or service that the company has already fronted. Depending on your state, you will still be entitled to some wage regardless if you sell or not, though obviously if you're not doing a good job the company has the right to let you go. And you're not required to pay the company money first to get the job.FFXIV: Herzog Erislieb (Cactaur) | RS3: UltimaSuende . 99 WC/Fish/Cook/Fletch/DivOh my god, it's still goingkarlpilkington4 posted...DarkRoast posted...
karlpilkington4 posted...
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_Marketing
Vector Marketing is a multi-level marketing subsidiary company and the domestic sales arm of Cutco Corporation, an Olean, New York-based cutlery manufacturer.[1][2]
Vector Marketing is a little different in that they claim not to be an MLM at all. According to them, their reps can earn incentives and prized for recruiting new sales reps, but they don’t get paid on a multi-level downline.
https://mlmcompanies.org/vector-marketing/
Maybe know what you're talking about before linking to wikipedia.
Call it what you want, but the concept remains. Sell as many products as you can to your warm market (friends, family, coworkers). But after those run out, then what?
Literally the next line; the author calls it an MLM consistently throughout that page and literally writes "Call it what you want" right after the excerpt you posted.FFXIV: Herzog Erislieb (Cactaur) | RS3: UltimaSuende . 99 WC/Fish/Cook/Fletch/Divkarlpilkington4 posted...NB4 some lame joke or backpeddle.
Shortly after this statement you went from "MLM isn't a scam" to "vector marketing isn't MLM"It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kvHexenherz posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
DarkRoast posted...
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Vector Marketing is a little different in that they claim not to be an MLM at all. According to them, their reps can earn incentives and prized for recruiting new sales reps, but they don’t get paid on a multi-level downline.
https://mlmcompanies.org/vector-marketing/
Maybe know what you're talking about before linking to wikipedia.
Call it what you want, but the concept remains. Sell as many products as you can to your warm market (friends, family, coworkers). But after those run out, then what?
Literally the next line; the author calls it an MLM consistently throughout that page and literally writes "Call it what you want" right after the excerpt you posted.
So, it's not a MLM because there's not a downline aka no multilevel, but its still a MLM because some dude says so?
Nice logic there bud. I linked to a random article because I didnt feel like finding the actual website link again
MYTH: Vector Marketing is a scam because it's a multi-level marketing company.
The TRUTH: Vector Marketing is not a multi-level marketing company. Vector Marketing is a single-level, direct-to-consumer marketing company and is recognized as an official member of the Direct Selling Association. In a multi-level marketing company, sales representatives make their money by recruiting additional sales representatives. This is not the case for Vector Marketing, as our sales representatives earn their money by selling Cutco's World's Finest Cutlery directly to consumers.
https://www.vectormarketing.com/app/vector-truthIs This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"Also
MYTH: Vector Marketing is a scam because you have to pay for your own starter demonstration kit.
The TRUTH: One common misunderstanding is that you have to buy your own starter kit to hold demonstrations for your clients. This is not true, as you are NOT required to purchase the starter kit. In fact, each Vector sales rep will be loaned a CUTCO demonstration set to show customers the quality of CUTCO products.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...Also
MYTH: Vector Marketing is a scam because you have to pay for your own starter demonstration kit.
The TRUTH: One common misunderstanding is that you have to buy your own starter kit to hold demonstrations for your clients. This is not true, as you are NOT required to purchase the starter kit. In fact, each Vector sales rep will be loaned a CUTCO demonstration set to show customers the quality of CUTCO products.
Source: A MLM company that doesn't want the negative press.
They only started doing that after a lawsuit.Well allons-y, Alonso!At some point you just need to put Proudclad on ignore.Aeris dies if she takes more damage than her current HP - Panthera
https://signavatar.com/26999_s.pngkarlpilkington4 posted...The TRUTH: One common misunderstanding is that you have to buy your own starter kit to hold demonstrations for your clients. This is not true, as you are NOT required to purchase the starter kit. In fact, each Vector sales rep will be loaned a CUTCO demonstration set to show customers the quality of CUTCO products.
You do not buy demonstration kit. You buy all the merchandise. I literally saw the invoice with my own eyes.It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kvkarlpilkington4 posted...You can make money in MLM. It's not a scam.
With an insane amount of luck and time invested.
And to crack the barrier as a top level earner you need to be an early adopter.
I see people saying they make 800 a month and that its great money.
Sure, it's nice pocket change if you use it as a secondary income and post a few things every day on social media.
But making it a full time job? You better be lucky and know a lot of idiots.
Edit: cutco knives are the BEST knives you can get. Absolutely professional grade, sharp as absolute balls and FREE lifetime warranty with no gimmicks.
I highly recommend if you cook daily and enjoy it. Even with the high price tag.https://imgur.com/Rqk1DYV - Super Bowl XXI/XXV/XLII/XLVI Champions - NY Giants
Eli Manning SB tracker: 2/2 Superbowls 2/2 SBMVP'sI remember i was looking for a job back in my college days about a decade ago. My friend had a "health job interview" for me and i went. I didnt know what was MLM at the time but the beginning part of the meeting had them showing nice cars and big mansions and that we can achieve these goals if we worked hard for it. Then came the time to sign up ajd buy their Usana startup kits. I felt loke i was bring forced to buy it but luckily i didnt have a bank account at the time. I wonder how they're doing now.Tyranthraxus posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
The TRUTH: One common misunderstanding is that you have to buy your own starter kit to hold demonstrations for your clients. This is not true, as you are NOT required to purchase the starter kit. In fact, each Vector sales rep will be loaned a CUTCO demonstration set to show customers the quality of CUTCO products.
You do not buy demonstration kit. You buy all the merchandise. I literally saw the invoice with my own eyes.
This isnt said anywhere, so feel free to post evidence. It doesnt even make sense
Vector- "Here's the demo kit. Go sell some knives"
*Goes to sell it to a homeowner*
Homeowner- "I'll buy it"
Me- "Hold on, first I have to order it myself with my own money, then I'll get it and sell it to you, and you give me money"Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"radical rhino posted...Holy s*** this karl guy is so obviously part of a MLM company and desperately doesn’t want to admit that he was scammed. Lol!
Nah he just goes into topics and finds some BS to shill for and trolls for 100 posts
Inb4 he says ‘posting “facts” isn’t trolling’I could see you, but I couldn't hear you You were holding your hat in the breeze Turning away from me In this moment you were stolen...thronedfire2 posted...radical rhino posted...
Holy s*** this karl guy is so obviously part of a MLM company and desperately doesn’t want to admit that he was scammed. Lol!
Nah he just goes into topics and finds some BS to shill for and trolls for 100 posts
Inb4 he says ‘posting “facts” isn’t trolling’
You're right, posting facts isnt trolling.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...This isnt said anywhere, so feel free to post evidence. It doesnt even make sense
Vector- "Here's the demo kit. Go sell some knives"
*Goes to sell it to a homeowner*
Homeowner- "I'll buy it"
Me- "Hold on, first I have to order it myself with my own money, then I'll get it and sell it to you, and you give me money"
It's not said anywhere because that's part of the scam. You buy the product in advance, then sell through your inventory. My brother literally bought $1000 worth of cutco knives.It says right here in Matthew 16:4 "Jesus doth not need a giant Mecha."
https://imgur.com/dQgC4kvTyranthraxus posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
This isnt said anywhere, so feel free to post evidence. It doesnt even make sense
Vector- "Here's the demo kit. Go sell some knives"
*Goes to sell it to a homeowner*
Homeowner- "I'll buy it"
Me- "Hold on, first I have to order it myself with my own money, then I'll get it and sell it to you, and you give me money"
It's not said anywhere because that's part of the scam. You buy the product in advance, then sell through your inventory. My brother literally bought $1000 worth of cutco knives.
Then surely someone on the internet would have the same experience. There are tons of websites incorrectly saying its a "scam", yet none of them say you have to buy knives. Atleast I can't find any. Pretty hard to believe you, since the scenario doesnt make sense to begin with. They give you a free training kit, yet you have to buy the knives? Literally makes zero sense.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...So, it's not a MLM because there's not a downline aka no multilevel, but its still a MLM because some dude says so?
Nice logic there bud. I linked to a random article because I didnt feel like finding the actual website link again
MYTH: Vector Marketing is a scam because it's a multi-level marketing company.
The TRUTH: Vector Marketing is not a multi-level marketing company. Vector Marketing is a single-level, direct-to-consumer marketing company and is recognized as an official member of the Direct Selling Association. In a multi-level marketing company, sales representatives make their money by recruiting additional sales representatives. This is not the case for Vector Marketing, as our sales representatives earn their money by selling Cutco's World's Finest Cutlery directly to consumers.
https://www.vectormarketing.com/app/vector-truth
1 - You posted a source saying "they don't call themselves an MLM", yet that article itself calls it an MLM constantly. Why would you post an article that you didn't even read yourself? Jfc
2 - Of course they're not going to say "We're an MLM" on their website when you've clearly seen how negatively that term is interpreted.
I am trying really hard to keep my ignore list at 0 but this is pushing the limits...FFXIV: Herzog Erislieb (Cactaur) | RS3: UltimaSuende . 99 WC/Fish/Cook/Fletch/DivHexenherz posted...karlpilkington4 posted...
So, it's not a MLM because there's not a downline aka no multilevel, but its still a MLM because some dude says so?
Nice logic there bud. I linked to a random article because I didnt feel like finding the actual website link again
MYTH: Vector Marketing is a scam because it's a multi-level marketing company.
The TRUTH: Vector Marketing is not a multi-level marketing company. Vector Marketing is a single-level, direct-to-consumer marketing company and is recognized as an official member of the Direct Selling Association. In a multi-level marketing company, sales representatives make their money by recruiting additional sales representatives. This is not the case for Vector Marketing, as our sales representatives earn their money by selling Cutco's World's Finest Cutlery directly to consumers.
https://www.vectormarketing.com/app/vector-truth
I am trying really hard to keep my ignore list at 0 but this is pushing the limits...
I really don't care what you do bud.Is This The Krusty Krab? "No This Is Patrick!"karlpilkington4 posted...Except in some MLM companies.
Which makes it a scam.
If a company requires you to front money, then you're not supposed to be an employee. At best it's royalty-based.
If they call it commission-based, then they're scamming you.[Feminist][CisGender][Straight Supporter][Non-Binary]
I'm not Ashamed to Dress 'like a Woman' because I don't think it's Shameful to be a Woman. ~Iggy Pop~- Boards
- Current Events
- One of my wife's family members fell for the Vector Marketing scam