I’ve always believed in multi-level marketing as a really good business model. Before I was very business savvy I signed up for one. I never made anything of it for a couple reasons. I wasn’t willing to call all my friends and relatives and try to sell it to them. And I didn’t really have any plan on how I was going to sell it and no experience in marketing or growing a small company.
Some years went by and I learned how to grow a small company and I learned a ton about marketing. In fact I have become a marketing consultant as my main career. From time to time I looked at MLMs again, still believing firmly that the right “pyramid scheme” could make the right person with the right product line a fortune. In fact I had seen it happen.
The problem was I still couldn’t find an MLM that I believed in. Either their product was sketchy, or they were too controlling, or they had been around too long for fast personal growth, or they required auto-shipping and minimum sales quotas, or they would take years to start really paying off, or the price to join was simply too high, and always the prices of the products were ridiculously high to make up for the fact that I had an upline to pay for.
I still kept the faith that if the right company could put the power of multi-level marketing into the right product that I would sign up in a heart beat. And recently that faith paid off when a friend of mine told me about a luxury travel club membership that would pay for itself on the first vacation and then save me more than $1,000 a week on luxury accommodations for the rest of my life. And, oh by the way, it has this great referral reward plan…
In my mind, the ideal multi-level marketing company would look something like this:
- A company with a product that everyone already uses
- A product that has a very high value to price ratio
- A product that doesn’t need an explanation and isn’t mysterious
- A product that I would buy in a heartbeat
- Not a lot of complicated products in the product line/catalog
- No ongoing fees, minimum purchases, or sales quotas
- High commissions right off the bat
- A really deep payment structure for extreme residual income
- A huge and global market
- Some kind of great perks
- Fast and easy to start up
- Low start up cost (minimum $100, maximum $3,000)
- FAST PROFITS
- FAST PROFITS
- FAST PROFITS
I have friends that have been in MLM’s for years who are sill making less than $500 a week and they make good part time work out of it. They have dozens of reps in their downline. What’s the problem? The problem is the payment plan, product price point, payment structure, and sellability of the products, are not in line with a large income. You have to build a huge organization to make enough to quit the rat race.
With the revolutionary new system called Perpetual Leverage which is used by Global Resorts Network, affiliates can see really fast ramp ups in revenue as well as amazing profits from very few sales. They collect a full $500 or $1,000 for each sale made in their immediate downline with the exception of their qualifying rep, plus ongoing full commissions from an infinite downline. The key to the system is the qualifying sales rolling uphill.
Here’s the dream scenario in MLM. You stumble upon a prospect who “gets it” right away. You sign them up. They proceed to sell the hell out of it making you thousands of dollars every week without you lifting a finger.
That exact scenario is happening to people in this business. Those are the kind of statements that make people scoff at MLM schemes. But someone has finally come along and figured out a way to make that happen through the Perpetual Leverage compensation plan. Check it out.
Scoff if you will, contact me if you don’t. I’ll show you how to hire a few good sales people and start collecting a real paycheck each week.



