How Much Income do Vemma Distributors Earn Per Year?
MLM earnings data on Vemma Corp and about dozen other top multi-level marketers (MLMs) has revealed a 99.8% chance that any Vemma distributor chosen at random, is actually losing money to this network marketer each year, not earning it. This is comparable to Mannatech's income scam, which you learn more about by clicking on the link. Specifically, 66.2% of distributors in this 'direct seller' can are observed to 'earn' between negative $500 and negative $1000/yr. That's a yearly Vemma income loss of $500.00 to $1000.00 US dollars, according to mlm research. Are distributors earning wages from the company's compensation plan? Players in MLM's or social entrepreneurship's underworld use a non-intelligible plan of compensation written by MLM comp plan experts to avoid monthly and yearly payment of bonuses and income to Vemma distributors, as does Mannatech.
The Criteria for an Illegal Vemma Pyramid
There are precedents specific federal guidelines for an illegal pyramid set forth by the FTC v Amway case in 1979. The Federal Trade Commission determined unlawful pyramids would be identifiable and classified if: 1. An emphasis was placed on infinite chain recruiting over product sales. And if: 2. There were inventory loading or product stacking. This is common to modern MLMs which have programs like 'auto-ship' or 'auto-pay,' meaning plans that find distributors buying products they cannot sell and must stack up in the closet or basement. For Vemma it's called 'auto-delivery' and leads to product stacking with automatic payments to Vemma from your bank account. The Vemma compensation rules, begin to meet criteria for an illegal Vemma pyramid scheme.
There are numerous online articles about product stacking in Veema, but are there other criterion based on selling recruitment 'opportunity' over products? Can internal company documents reveal illegal pyramid schemes? What if upper-level members accidentally disclosed that the main financial objective were recruiting, not selling products. Take a look at this evidence supporting classification of an unlawful Vemma pyramid scheme:
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Requirement for auto-delivery, which leads to product stacking. |