subject: Network Marketing:The Next Level [print this page] Network Marketing:The Next Level Network Marketing:The Next Level
Most of those friends, because they are trying to sell something as well, will either ignore the emails or send you an advertisement right back at you. It's a vicious cycle and this way no one wins but the site you have your profile on. Because the more profiles a social network site has, the more attractive it is to bigger business advertising to you.
You got the right idea, but the wrong forum. Currently you send messages to those on the same network in hopes that they will look at what you have to offer. You pray it will be so attractive to them that they will drop what they are doing and do what you're doing. After all, no one is doing anything more important than you, right? Wrong. Every one of us has our own dreams and although we may be followers on twitter, we have no intentions of following your dreams.
Taking network marketing to the next level is building a forum designed to work successfully whereas each and every one of us gets to keep our own dreams in tact. You don't send emails out; people go looking for what you have to offer. If they like what they see, they will buy from you. If you like what you see, you will buy from them.
Our concept is quite honest and straight forward. For example:You sella tangibleat $35 andsomeone elseprovides a servicefor $45 to perform.You decide to buy this service offeredbut someone else decides to buy something else from another. Over the course of the yearyou sold 1000 tangibles andsomeone elseprovided 500 services.You earned $35,000 andsomeone elseearned $22,500. You and others still buy from Wal-Mart the rest of the year but once a yearyou come to the Merchants Market to buy and sellyourgoodsor services.
Even whenyou are off twittering, promoting other things or having dinner with the familyyou are still making money because all new merchantsentering the program has the same obligation as you. Merchants have an obligation to buy from each other at leastonce ayear, items no greater than $100 in retail value and have no reoccurring payments. It's that simple.
So you see; it's no small change. Our philosophy is why givethe major chains allyour business. Large companies, when the economyis slow will cut jobs. When there are no jobs the majority of spending is for life's essentials.But everybody, before things get drastic, as long as they still have a roof over their heads and a computer in the home can keep a constant flow of income coming regardless of the economy. Anyone can afford $10 to $100 once per year on something that is nonessential.