MLMs are recruitment-based businesses where participants find others to join, forming a pyramid structure. Money flows up to the top, often from new recruits rather than product sales. Sign-up fees and starter kits are common, costing between $99 and $499.
MLMs rely on recruiting new members, but after 13 levels, the pyramid surpasses the Earth's population. This structure ensures most participants lose money, with only 3% making any profit.
Brownie Wise revolutionized Tupperware sales by introducing parties, making it fun and social. She built a recruitment structure with uplines and downlines, turning it into a popular pastime for women in the 1940s.
Amway defended itself in a 1970s FTC case by creating the 'Amway rules,' claiming they self-regulated. Despite no enforcement, the FTC lost the case, setting a precedent that allowed MLMs to continue legally.
MLMs offer a sense of financial freedom and social interaction, often in areas with limited job opportunities. They provide an escape from domestic duties and a chance to earn money, despite low success rates.
Many MLMs, like Amway and Mary Kay, are infused with Christian values, particularly the prosperity gospel. They align with the idea that success and wealth are signs of divine favor, appealing to conservative and religious communities.
Affiliate links and TikTok shops are emerging as alternatives to MLMs, offering similar sales structures without recruitment. Some MLMs, like Rodan and Fields, are transitioning to affiliate models, reducing their profitability.
The FTC has issued warnings and studied MLMs' income disclosure statements, revealing widespread fraud. However, enforcement remains weak, especially under administrations friendly to MLMs, like Trump's.
In this Money Talks: Jane Marie has spent years reporting on the tangled web of multi-level marketing companies, or MLMs, with her podcast The Dream) and dives even deeper in her new book, Selling the Dream: The Billion-Dollar Industry Bankrupting Americans). In this episode, she sits down with Emily Peck to discuss their origins, their appeal to American women, and their extremely questionable business practices.
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