Thursday, 22 September 2016

Why You Should Avoid Schemes Like The National Wealth Center

By David Baker


Millions of people are looking for ways to earn a living from home, usually on the Internet. A quick search will reveal thousands of so-called opportunities, but very rarely do any of these easy money programs actually work. In fact, the majority of these entities are nothing more than a pyramid scheme, and the National Wealth Center is no exception.

Any time an organization is promoting a digital product, the buyer must be wary of what they are signing up for. Most of the time these digital products are not worth the paper they are not written on. In our current information age, most anything a person wishes to learn, or access, is freely available to anyone willing to spend the time to find it.

It is unfortunate people get taken in by these crooks when there are a million quality products available. These companies often have a department of affiliates who promote and sell their products online and in the real world. The cosmetics industry had taken advantage of this long before the Internet came into being.

A pyramid scheme is going to try and sell information which they will claim is something special or private, and cannot be released publicly. They try to make the potential affiliate feel special. At the end of it all, the only thing the affiliates are selling is this same package of information to other potential affiliates.

Those who initiated the pyramid schemes are the only ones who really make any money in the long run. They do not really care about the quality of the product they are advertising. They also do not really care about keeping affiliates for the long-term, as their real goal is to get as many new affiliates signed on for a few months as they possibly can.

The notion is that if they can fool enough people to buy a one-month membership, then they will continue to make money off of these first-time buyers. They do not really care about the quality of the information they call their product. The point is selling memberships more than teaching people how to start a business.

For those companies who are legitimate, their initial start-up cost will probably be more than the membership fees charged by a pyramid scheme. Many of these companies require their members to buy the products up front, then it is up to them to make sales. A smart investor has a list of customers already set up before making their initial investment.

The Internet is no different than the physical market. If a person or organization has an inferior or bogus product, then those who are unfortunate enough to sign onto the program in the beginning get taken for a ride. When trying to start a business, it is always good to sell an actual product rather than simply passing themselves off as possessing some sort of special information no one can obtain from anywhere else.




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