Kenny,Allofus123 said:Dave, at this point saying you received this stuff and proving it are two different things. Short of actual pictures with the documentation papers showing you receiving this for free IMO is at best suspect. If you did receive something congrats. Too bad the people down the line of this scheme will never be rewarded for all their work in helping you get yours.
Before anyone gets all bent out of shape I have never had a horse in this "for Free" crap race....... just have never believed it to be true much less worth the amount of time involved to follow all the rules and then cancel all the programs you had to sign up for. It is a chain letter type of deal where "if" they are actually sending anything at all, eventually, it will fail since you will run out of people. Call it what you want.
I'm not sure luck has anything to do with it..... apparently, if they are sending this stuff then it becomes a follow the rules exactly to the letter and impose on your friends to sign up for things they never would have signed up for in the first place. I suppose if you are about serving yourself and to hell with whoever gets hit in the aftermath then this program just might be your cup of tea.txmatt said:I bet if they are lucky one of them will get the free ipod........
Can I ask you why you posted the above? Did someone on this thread mention anything about Dave ripping people off? :lookup: Come on.... lets read and comprehend whats being said before posting please. This has been a very civil thread about the process of a chain letter or as some say MLM.SFG75 said:I don’t know, if anyone is getting ripped off by Dave, then they should take it up with him themselves.
Couldn't agree with you more...... that is a thread in itself.Rod said:I for one hate rebates. I'm sick of buying crap at high prices and never receiving the rebate for it. If you actually take the time to go through all the hoops, you're still not gauranteed to receive your rebate. This in my opinion is the biggest scam going on.
I'm not sure I said 'unsuccessful'. Yes, MLMs work because of quantity. But, individual success in an MLM happens because of quality.Allofus123 said:Can I ask you why you posted the above? Did someone on this thread mention anything about Dave ripping people off? :lookup: Come on.... lets read and comprehend whats being said before posting please. This has been a very civil thread about the process of a chain letter or as some say MLM.SFG75 said:I don’t know, if anyone is getting ripped off by Dave, then they should take it up with him themselves.
Gawntrail - good post and amway is prob a good subject to use. Now I have nothing against amway or anyone involved with it. As you said they have many successful people. I thought I also heard you say that in order for it to work they had to have many unsuccessful people (or people that don't follow thru). My question is how could it work if everyone participates?
I know for every situation there will be someone who says it worked for them but I'm talking about the system itself. Everyone can not win. You have to rely on many people failing. The only way to succeed is to bring more people into the system..... everyone can not be successful.
Everyone is entitled to their opinions. I appreciate yours. Your personal experience has led you to this. Fair enough.Rod said:BTW, Quixstar is a joke, all your doing is making the big corporation even richer. If I wanted to take all that time and engery promoting a business, I sure as hell wouldn't promote someone else's...
If someone I trusted and respected showed me how become successful with Quixstar, then yes I would definately be willing to give it a try. Two things turned me off to Quixstar: 1.) The people I've met who tried it haven't had the most success, however that could simply be because they didn't follow plan B. 2.) The start up fee and yearly dues. Not really a big deal, but if Quixstar is benefitting from any sales I produce, I would think they wouldn't charge any fees.gawntrail said:Now, if someone you trusted and respected showed you how they made it work for them..........would it still be a joke....or would it simply be something you are not willing or able to take advantage of?
They do charge a yearly fee. This is because they do most of the work. And it is the only way to keep it a private enterprise. Thus protecting the business opportunity from being poluted by unsavory individuals looking for something for nothing. There are also other tax issues and things I can't recall right now. But, it is basically for the protection of the opportunity.Rod said:If someone I trusted and respected showed me how become successful with Quixstar, then yes I would definately be willing to give it a try. Two things turned me off to Quixstar: 1.) The people I've met who tried it haven't had the most success, however that could simply be because they didn't follow plan B. 2.) The start up fee and yearly dues. Not really a big deal, but if Quixstar is benefitting from any sales I produce, I would think they wouldn't charge any fees.gawntrail said:Now, if someone you trusted and respected showed you how they made it work for them..........would it still be a joke....or would it simply be something you are not willing or able to take advantage of?