Help enough others get what they want and
you'll ultimately get what YOU WANT." Zig Ziglar
According to Harvard Business School, a once in a lifetime opportunity looks like...
"A high percentage of work from home opportunities are in Network Marketing. Most home based businesses fail for a variety of reason , none more critical then getting in at the wrong time in the company's life cycle...
Network Marketing or Multi Level Marketing (MLM) is being taught at more than 200 colleges including Harvard Business School. After extensive research into the network marketing industry, Harvard Business School developed 3 criteria that a network marketing company must have in order to make it a desirable opportunity. They are:
1. The company must be at least 18 months old. 90% of all network marketing companies that fail do so in the first 18 months of operations. Lack of adequate financing and inexperienced senior management are two of the more common pitfalls of start up companies so be sure to find out what you can about the MLM’s funding and management. (LV is 7 years young and has top industry experts leading the way as well as being publicly traded on the Nasdaq.)
2. The company must have a product that is both unique and highly consumable. Meaning it must be an exclusive product that can be purchased only from your distributors with repeated sales thereby guaranteeing customer loyalty versus a one-time sale and having to locate new customers.
(LV products are the first of their kind -Category Creators- and are sold only through Independent Distributors who carry no inventory.)
3. It needs to be a “ground floor” opportunity. Harvard Business School suggests that in order for the opportunity to qualify as a ground floor type, the number of existing distributorships should be less than ½ of 1% in the country where this network company exists. In the U.S., this figure is equal to 1.5 million people. Harvard Business School also stated that if there were less than 500,000 people involved, you would be on the cutting edge of a great opportunity. If the company has less than 100,000 distributors, Harvard Business School considers it to be a once in a lifetime opportunity.
(To date, there are approx 71,000 distribution partners in the world.)
"A high percentage of work from home opportunities are in Network Marketing. Most home based businesses fail for a variety of reason , none more critical then getting in at the wrong time in the company's life cycle...
Network Marketing or Multi Level Marketing (MLM) is being taught at more than 200 colleges including Harvard Business School. After extensive research into the network marketing industry, Harvard Business School developed 3 criteria that a network marketing company must have in order to make it a desirable opportunity. They are:
1. The company must be at least 18 months old. 90% of all network marketing companies that fail do so in the first 18 months of operations. Lack of adequate financing and inexperienced senior management are two of the more common pitfalls of start up companies so be sure to find out what you can about the MLM’s funding and management. (LV is 7 years young and has top industry experts leading the way as well as being publicly traded on the Nasdaq.)
2. The company must have a product that is both unique and highly consumable. Meaning it must be an exclusive product that can be purchased only from your distributors with repeated sales thereby guaranteeing customer loyalty versus a one-time sale and having to locate new customers.
(LV products are the first of their kind -Category Creators- and are sold only through Independent Distributors who carry no inventory.)
3. It needs to be a “ground floor” opportunity. Harvard Business School suggests that in order for the opportunity to qualify as a ground floor type, the number of existing distributorships should be less than ½ of 1% in the country where this network company exists. In the U.S., this figure is equal to 1.5 million people. Harvard Business School also stated that if there were less than 500,000 people involved, you would be on the cutting edge of a great opportunity. If the company has less than 100,000 distributors, Harvard Business School considers it to be a once in a lifetime opportunity.
(To date, there are approx 71,000 distribution partners in the world.)
Break free from average...Your Time is NOW!
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