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The Internet scams should not be confused with legitimate
products and services relating to the Internet. For instance, marketing
Internet access at competitive prices with AOL or MSN is perfectly
legitimate. The marketing of web site hosting services to small
businesses or individuals who buy those web site hosting services
because they intend to use them and do use them for purposes other
than "buying into the deal" or recruiting others to do
the same, is legitimate.
Most major MLM companies have offered their distributors
replicating web sites that tie into the home page of the MLM company
to sell its products or services. This is a very useful tool, which
is provided to MLM distributors to expand their business. It is
entirely legitimate. It is questionable whether such web sites should
be commissionable, in that they are being used as a sales tool,
rather than sold as an independent web site hosting product. That
issue must be left for another day, however, and companies have
adopted different policies on this point.
DOT SCAM WARNING SIGNS.
It is the "scam" type template programs
that individuals should steer clear. These are programs in which
web template fees are paid to participate "in the deal"
and not to move products or services. Individuals who are earning
thousands of dollars a month in such programs are earning money
not from e-commerce, but from front-loading their downline with
multiple template sales.
Here are some of the warning signs that individuals
should pay attention to before participating in a web hosting template
multilevel program:
1. If individuals are encouraged to buy multiple
web template sites, it is likely a sign of front-loading.
2. If the primary use of the web sites that are
sold is to recruit others to purchase similar sites, red flags
arise.
3. If, in discussing the program with others, it
appear that little or no e-commerce is accomplished in a web template
program associated with a virtual shopping mall, the MLM program
is merely a "front" for moving money.
4. If there is really very little or no money to
be made in e-commerce, this should cause concern.
5. If it turns out that many of the web template
sites that have been sold by the company have not been initiated,
this is a problem.
6. If the company sells multiple web sites and commissions
are paid on web site sales before web sites are initiated, the
program bears similarity to the illegal program of Gold Unlimited
in which commissions were paid on gold contracts before gold was
shipped.
7. If the company holds itself out to be a web site
hosting company, but it cannot demonstrate sale or usage of web
sites outside of the network of recruiters, this is indicative
that the only reason people are buying the web template sites
is to "buy into the deal."
8. If the company has located itself offshore, it
is probably anticipating challenges to jurisdiction of U.S. authorities
or shielding of assets outside the United States - a major red
flag.
A MODEST PREDICTION.
Many industry observers ask the question, "What
will happen to all of these _on fire_ web template companies?"
Given the historical experience of this type of business model,
the following prediction may not be far off:
Out of ten of these sorts of schemes:
1. One of the schemes will probably survive and
ultimately transform into a legitimate business, but this will
occur long after many individuals have been "burned"
and lost their "investment."
2. One will probably be targeted in a major way
by a regulatory agency, such as the FTC, and prosecuted and put
out of business.
3. Eight out of ten of such businesses will probably
go out of business of their own accord when the market has become
saturated with the scheme they have been perpetrating. Some individuals
who "got into the deal" early will have made a lot of
money, and many will have nothing to show for it.
The fact is that no MLM company has stood the test
of time that did not offer a quality service or product to its distributors
and the general public. Over time, companies which have used fads
or fashionable products or services as a "facade" to move
huge sums of cash, have littered the highways of the network marketing
industry. If individuals would like to think of the MLM industry
as a lottery or a game of chance or a "deal," then the
front-loading MLM replicating web site template programs are the
latest of the "money games" for them. When the "money
games" have passed, however, the rest of the legitimate network
marketing industry will likely say "good riddance" and
hope to attract distributors back to programs with "real"
products and services with a real long term future.
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