- May 3, 2009
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Thrive patches are the new wave out here in So Cal
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I've had so many crappy jobs throughout my youth. I had one job in particular where I sold subscriptions to the local newspaper here (the Atlanta Journal-Constitution door to door). Of course the job description didn't say anything about door-to-door sales, it was just some BS about sales and marketing.
I show up to work the first day dressed all nice and the guy I was shadowing looked at me like I was crazy. Like 10 grown men all piled into the back of a van and they dropped us off in random neighborhoods around Atlanta. They gave us a map and told us to knock on all of these doors and try to sell subscriptions and they told us they pick us up in 5 hours.
Keep in mind, this was in May in Georgia, it was over 90° every single day. if we needed to use the restroom, they told us to ask homeowners if we could use theirs. I'm not sure if you guys realize how humiliating it is to have to ask a random stranger to go into their home to take a dump.
not to mention the dude I was shadowing was one of the worst habitual liars I've ever seen. He talked about all the money he had made at this job and all the stuff he bought yet he took the bus to work. I quit that job on the second day.
All those jobs are the same though, they allow anybody in and they know that 95% of the people won't make it past the month.
It's deep bro. Learning more about how shady these MLM/pyramid schemes are has make be question alot about my childhood/early adulthoodcome to think of it, my mom was heavy into Mary Kay. I rememeber she has like those HUGE pink boxes back in the late 90s....Jesus
Bro what!?! Ask to use their bathrooms!?! My god.
Yooo I don't even let the homies take a dump at the crib, damn sure won't let some random *** dude hustling newspaper
There was one time where I had to take a dump really bad and I'd knocked on dozens of doors in a row with no answer. I ended up taking a dump in the bushes.
It's deep bro. Learning more about how shady these MLM/pyramid schemes are has make be question alot about my childhood/early adulthood
It was awful. Not to mention I'm a black man knocking on random (mostly white folks) doors'. I was a junior in college and a little more naive but I'm lucky some white dude didn't shoot my a**. No protection for if it rained (Georgia has alot of those 30 min rain showers)
Some times I was lucky and the neighborhood had a clubhouse/pool area so I could use the restroom. There was one time where I had to take a dump really bad and I'd knocked on dozens of doors in a row with no answer. I ended up taking a dump in the bushes.
I graduated college in 2010, in the heart of the recession, I could go on for days about the awful jobs I had before I landed on my feet.
Anyone heard of Vemma?
Ofcourse the top tier makes bank that's how a pyramid scheme works!!!Worked for a corporate in one of the company that was mentioned and yes the top tier makes bank. i used to go to the convention as a staff and the dedication of the sellers is out of this world. Theres a r/anti-mlm in reddit if you guys want to hear all the stories lol.
Same kinda set up as when I sold the windows and siding door to door ...they would drop us off at any neighborhood in the Baltimore Metro round 9 or 10 am, hand you a clipboard and pen talking bout come back with some “leads” and scoop us at 3/4 ...and the ppl in charge always threatened that they drove around to monitor us but we ain’t believe em thoI've had so many crappy jobs throughout my youth. I had one job in particular where I sold subscriptions to the local newspaper here (the Atlanta Journal-Constitution door to door). Of course the job description didn't say anything about door-to-door sales, it was just some BS about sales and marketing.
I show up to work the first day dressed all nice and the guy I was shadowing looked at me like I was crazy. Like 10 grown men all piled into the back of a van and they dropped us off in random neighborhoods around Atlanta. They gave us a map and told us to knock on all of these doors and try to sell subscriptions and they told us they pick us up in 5 hours.
Keep in mind, this was in May in Georgia, it was over 90° every single day. if we needed to use the restroom, they told us to ask homeowners if we could use theirs. I'm not sure if you guys realize how humiliating it is to have to ask a random stranger to go into their home to take a dump.
not to mention the dude I was shadowing was one of the worst habitual liars I've ever seen. He talked about all the money he had made at this job and all the stuff he bought yet he took the bus to work. I quit that job on the second day.
All those jobs are the same though, they allow anybody in and they know that 95% of the people won't make it past the month.
Same kinda set up as when I sold the windows and siding door to door ...they would drop us off at any neighborhood in the Baltimore Metro round 9 or 10 am, hand you a clipboard and pen talking bout come back with some “leads” and scoop us at 3/4 ...and the ppl in charge always threatened that they drove around to monitor us but we ain’t believe em tho
About a month and half in, me and 2 of my mans that took that job got assigned round our way...we spent the whole day on the block hoopin and choppin it up with biddies...played the PS2 and had a nap at lunch, great day 4real cuz we still got the bs daily base rate just for being out there ...manager drove by seen us hoopin and told us we were done...yo was mad as ****
In the end made like a $1,000 so that was enough to hold me down most of the summer when I was 17/18 so I wasn’t trippin...job sucked tho, walking in the heat knocking on random ppl doors...worrying bout being watched
was a spot called Pinnacle Energy, this was in like 03/04...you could actually make some money off it but what made it sketchy was the way you had to go about doing the job ...like you said before turnover rate was crazyWas the company called 'Power HRG'? I had an interview with them but I could see through their BS (this was after the newspaper job). The interviewer was talmbout some 'Field Marketing' and I was like "yeah, OK"
how do i become leader of said corporation?
Yooo I don't even let the homies take a dump at the crib, damn sure won't let some random *** dude hustling newspaper
A MFer tell you to ask random strangers to use their bathroom. GOTTA be a fool bruh. That alone would’ve made me quit on the spot.
If you asked a stay-at-home mom, or single mom, or woman who was home alone, to use the bathroom, you just asking for a case bruh.
I’m glad atlsfinest learned his lesson.
You was playing with Fire
Gotta start your own and get to hustlin, line up some ppl under youhow do i become leader of said corporation?
You have to become a master recruiter and liar. The way to become big in these multi-level marketing, pyramid schemes is to go out there and recruit as many people as possible. You need to get comfortable lying to people and faking it till you make it, the majority of the guys you speak to in these organizations aren't nearly as successful as they claim. they talked a lot about how they're retired and they're on vacation all the time and how many cars and houses they have but most of that the LIE from what I've seen.
The Amway guys I spoke to said they literally walk around the gym or the grocery store for hours and spark of conversations with people. Recruiting people has to become your job.
The people who make it big in these pyramid schemes don't make money from selling products, they make money by recruiting people and then the people they recruit recruit other people and their network just becomes larger and larger and they just keep making money off of their "downline" (people underneath some in the organization). the reason that the people at the top look like they're not doing any work anymore is because they probably aren't. they probably have hundreds, if not thousands of people they're making income off of but it takes years (sometimes decades of work to get there.)
Literally, less than 1% of people in these organizations ever turn a profit. Just to get started with these pyramid schemes, you have to dump hundreds if not thousands of dollars on products just to display, sell and build your inventory.
Most people are really excited in the beginning but end up not making any money and just end up having a garage or closet full of Amway products, essential oils, bummy teas, etc. the real insidious part is that the higher-ups don't need you to sell anything, they make money from you dropping stacks just to build your inventory.
That forex seems like the new wave of pyramid schemes. People post those chart things like talk about it like it's a cult. Chick on my fb posts about it literally several times a day.