Put on the Camouflage of "Product Sales"

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Sunanda K. Chavan
Though virtually none of the "sales representatives" ever earns a profit or has any "customers," a pyramid scheme can be made to appear as a "sales company." This is because each new recruit makes a purchase of products and the commissions are all based on the purchases of products by other recruits. There may be virtually no end-users, just a long chain of "distributors." The few sales representatives that do earn a profit do so only from a continuous influx of newly recruited investors (other sales representatives/distributors). If the recruitment program ends, their income ceases.

Though the recruitment-based scheme is camouflaged to appear as a "sales" company, the
classic elements of the pyramid scheme fraud are all present:
1. Multiple levels of investors to bring in more recruits;
2. Payments to gain and maintain a position on the chain;
3. Recruitment required to move up the chain where rewards are paid;
4. Early investors are paid directly from the newest recruits' investments;
5. A structure that places the vast majority permanently at the bottom where no income is possible;
6. Each succeeding level in the recruitment-based scheme must be larger than the one above, and the numbers of total participants must grow successively, e.g. five sales representatives recruit 25 who must recruit 125 who recruit 625, etc. until saturation.

Such a scheme can never stop recruiting. It can never stabilize since it has no true customer base. For as long as the scheme operates and expands, the opportunity for recruiting declines, thereby further reducing the opportunity for income. Profit in such a scheme is not true profit but only a transfer of money from the latest recruits to the earlier ones.

Yet, the laundering of money through product purchases can camouflage the entire operation as a "sales company" based on "products" – not fees. The product sales in a recruitment scheme are induced by the false promises of income tied to ongoing inventory purchases. No purchase may be required to join the scheme, but monthly purchases are required to "qualify" for the "unlimited income" opportunity.
 
Though virtually none of the "sales representatives" ever earns a profit or has any "customers," a pyramid scheme can be made to appear as a "sales company." This is because each new recruit makes a purchase of products and the commissions are all based on the purchases of products by other recruits. There may be virtually no end-users, just a long chain of "distributors." The few sales representatives that do earn a profit do so only from a continuous influx of newly recruited investors (other sales representatives/distributors). If the recruitment program ends, their income ceases.

Though the recruitment-based scheme is camouflaged to appear as a "sales" company, the
classic elements of the pyramid scheme fraud are all present:
1. Multiple levels of investors to bring in more recruits;
2. Payments to gain and maintain a position on the chain;
3. Recruitment required to move up the chain where rewards are paid;
4. Early investors are paid directly from the newest recruits' investments;
5. A structure that places the vast majority permanently at the bottom where no income is possible;
6. Each succeeding level in the recruitment-based scheme must be larger than the one above, and the numbers of total participants must grow successively, e.g. five sales representatives recruit 25 who must recruit 125 who recruit 625, etc. until saturation.

Such a scheme can never stop recruiting. It can never stabilize since it has no true customer base. For as long as the scheme operates and expands, the opportunity for recruiting declines, thereby further reducing the opportunity for income. Profit in such a scheme is not true profit but only a transfer of money from the latest recruits to the earlier ones.

Yet, the laundering of money through product purchases can camouflage the entire operation as a "sales company" based on "products" – not fees. The product sales in a recruitment scheme are induced by the false promises of income tied to ongoing inventory purchases. No purchase may be required to join the scheme, but monthly purchases are required to "qualify" for the "unlimited income" opportunity.

Thanks my friend for providing such a nice information on Product Sales. I also found something important which might be of your uses so uploading here a presentation on Product Sales. Please download and check it and let me know your feedback.
 

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