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-   -   Anybody Involved in Pre-Paid Legal &/ or Pyramids (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=80559)

srjjames 09-09-2006 01:11 PM

Anybody Involved in Pre-Paid Legal &/ or Pyramids
 
Hi, everybody. I'm not sure if there is a thread for this, but I was wondering in anyone on the board is involved with Pre-Paid Legal and if so how is it working for everyone? I just joined two nights ago and I'm reading trying to learn exactly how it works.

tld221 09-10-2006 12:05 PM

to me it seems like a pyramid scheme, sort of like how the "free ipod" thing works... or rather, it works a lot like Vector/Cutco knives.

the way it was "presented" to me (i have friends who do it) is that you buy the service first, which is $24.99/month. that includes 24-hour access to the "best lawyers in the nation." its supposed to be the poor-man's way of being able to afford legal services like the middle/upper class can. (again similar to CutCo. CutCo makes you buy the knife set for like $300). and then you sell the service to 3 people. then you move up to whatever the next level is. then you sell 5 more, and you get some kinda bonus. and you keep going up and up until you become an "executive." not sure what that entails, but i think it means you get more money per client you take on.

to me, i hear it pays a LOT but thats if you go really hard at it - as in setting up lots of "presentations" and having a high rate of people buying the service. supposedly PPLS is really reputable cause its been around for years, but ive only heard of it since my sophomore year (about 2 years ago).

f8nacn 09-10-2006 04:51 PM

PPL is a pyramid...although not really a scam... I know someone who does this as their primary source of income. There are advantages and disadvantages that they do not tell you about before signing up.

One advantage....you can get paid by direct deposit whenever you make a sale (normally next day I believe).

One disadvantage is that you have to continue to recruit...because if someone cancels the service you will have to pay the company back.

kddani 09-10-2006 07:32 PM

This is a really interesting subject that I admittedly know nothing about.

But as an attorney, I really wonder about some of the ethical and professional responsibility affects that this sort of thing can have...

f8nacn 09-10-2006 07:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kddani
This is a really interesting subject that I admittedly know nothing about.

But as an attorney, I really wonder about some of the ethical and professional responsibility affects that this sort of thing can have...

Can't respond to that above --- not sure what the attorney's cut is should someone actually need their services.......never used the service so I thought it was a waste of money...they do have an identity theft watch program that may be okay....

OOhsoflyDELTA#9 09-10-2006 08:17 PM

my experience...
 
I signed up for PPL back in 2000....I was working at First Union and my supervisor convinced me to sign on....I can't remember all the details but I remember it cost like $500 to get in and I may have signed up 8 to 10 people...I had to many other things going on in my life at the time, so I end up just letting it go......it had that "cult" like pressure thing about it also..like your group leader calling to motivate you, then the regional leader calling to motivate you and so on and so on..it was more contact then I wanted.....a friend of mine attempted to use the "letter writing" aspect of the service a couple of years ago and it didn't happen/work and she was VERY upset about it...I'll have to call her to get details to post.....

ProspeKt 09-11-2006 03:44 AM

PPL, just like many other pyramids are effective and can prove very beneficial. I signed up with ppl around this time last year with not much success due to the afore spoken of having too much other stuff going on...especially school. Nevertheless I was and am thankful for the learning experience.

The problem with ppl and many other pyramids is that they are too old (10-15+yrs). As a result, by the time you get in, you're so far down the "pyramid" that you have to work extra hard to see the fruit of your labor. The people who generate the most revenue from them probably got into it at its early stages. Whether the product is bad or awesome and in high demand, if you can get set up in a network marketing oppurtunity in its infancy then you are bound for success.

There is a new product that just launched about a month ago. Not only is it brand new, the product itself is and proves to be a very hot commodity. So much so that the man under whom I am under generated $18,000 his first three weeks. Since I am under him, I am now 5th from the president of the company.

It is said that the three sure ways of income are real estate, stocks & bonds, and network marketing. I've taken notes and grabbed the first and last and am reaping the benefits. PM me if you would like to get in on this opportunity.

SouthernSweet 09-11-2006 06:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ProspeKt
PPL, just like many other pyramids are effective and can prove very beneficial. I signed up with ppl around this time last year with not much success due to the afore spoken of having too much other stuff going on...especially school. Nevertheless I was and am thankful for the learning experience.

The problem with ppl and many other pyramids is that they are too old (10-15+yrs). As a result, by the time you get in, you're so far down the "pyramid" that you have to work extra hard to see the fruit of your labor. The people who generate the most revenue from them probably got into it at its early stages. Whether the product is bad or awesome and in high demand, if you can get set up in a network marketing oppurtunity in its infancy then you are bound for success.

There is a new product that just launched about a month ago. Not only is it brand new, the product itself is and proves to be a very hot commodity. So much so that the man under whom I am under generated $18,000 his first three weeks. Since I am under him, I am now 5th from the president of the company.

It is said that the three sure ways of income are real estate, stocks & bonds, and network marketing. I've taken notes and grabbed the first and last and am reaping the benefits. PM me if you would like to get in on this opportunity.

I have a couple of friends who are making six-figure incomes in network marketing companies, however, how can you be 5th from the President of the company?

The owner of a network marketing company is usually not at the top of the chain, it's the next person he recruits that is at the top.

The only way you can be 5th from the President of the company is if your MLM has the TITLE of President, for whoever is at the top of that branch...and whoever he signs up personally, can technically be right under him, but that doesn't mean they are making a dime.

MLM are worthless unless there is a way to move up the ladder, and very few MLM companies have this feature built-in to their system. Otherwise, if the person that recruits you fails in their responsibility to help you grow your area of the business, then they stay and reap the rewards of your hard work and they can sit back and do nothing.

Most of the newer MLM have taken the "fixed position" feature out of their system....if your production surpasses that of your sponsor, you get to move "up" the chain and move past them so that someone that is llazy cannot continue to draw money off your work unless they are actively participating. Yes, your sponsor doesn't get fully penalized for recruiting a winning business builder, but as you move past them in the ladder, they make less and less off you until eventually they make nothing.

kddani 09-11-2006 06:51 AM

I "lost" a close friend and sorority sister to MLM. It sucked her in, took advantage of how nice she was, and sucked out all of her money. It made her turn away from her friends, made all these glamorous promises, but they never resulted. So I personally have a VERY poor view of MLM and the way that they are run- taking advantage of other people, brainwashing them, recruiting them, shaking them down for money at every opportunity (this conference, that meeting, etc.), alienating them from friends and family, etc.

Because of this experience, and because of being a lawyer, I am very interested in learning more about this from an educational standpoint. NOTE: DO NOT TRY TO SOLICIT ME! Does anyone have any informational links about Pre-paid Legal they could share with me?

Still BLUTANG 09-11-2006 10:11 AM

my last employer offered PPL as a "benefit." I declined the coverage and thought it was a little tacky that the service was even available... not because i have anything against PPL but because i used to know some people involved in that product and and i didn't think too highly of them.

I guess who ever sealed the deal to offer PPL to an entire company is doing quite well!

OOhsoflyDELTA#9 09-11-2006 10:11 AM

curious???
 
What's MLM?

kddani 09-11-2006 10:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Still BLUTANG
my last employer offered PPL as a "benefit." I declined the coverage and thought it was a little tacky that the service was even available... not because i have anything against PPL but because i used to know some people involved in that product and and i didn't think too highly of them.

I guess who ever sealed the deal to offer PPL to an entire company is doing quite well!

My dad had that offered to him at a previous job as well. Thankfully I was able to tell him that it was a waste.

The majority of people will only need a lawyer when the make their will or when a loved one dies and the estate has to be probated. It's just not a cost-effective thing to do, or at least it seems.

OOhsoflyDELTA#9, MLM stands for multi-level marketing (also called a pyramid scheme). Amway is a prime example.

AlphaFrog 09-11-2006 10:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by OOhsoflyDELTA#9
What's MLM?


Multi-Level Marketing.

I go out and recruit 10 people to market under me. I get money from every "product" they market (Bell South contracts, UPS accts, Quill office Supply Orders, etc). Then, they go out and each hire 10 people under them, of which, they get a cut, and I get a cut. I now get money from my 10, and the 10 that each of them hired. The higher up you are, the more people that are feeding your paycheck.

f8nacn 09-11-2006 10:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kddani
I "lost" a close friend and sorority sister to MLM. It sucked her in, took advantage of how nice she was, and sucked out all of her money. It made her turn away from her friends, made all these glamorous promises, but they never resulted. So I personally have a VERY poor view of MLM and the way that they are run- taking advantage of other people, brainwashing them, recruiting them, shaking them down for money at every opportunity (this conference, that meeting, etc.), alienating them from friends and family, etc.

Because of this experience, and because of being a lawyer, I am very interested in learning more about this from an educational standpoint. NOTE: DO NOT TRY TO SOLICIT ME! Does anyone have any informational links about Pre-paid Legal they could share with me?

if you do a google search on prepaid legal, their website (national) will be listed.

shinerbock 09-11-2006 10:54 AM

While some of these things can be beneficial, I think overall they are to be avoided. I would compare them to people who are so kept up on pretenses that they refuse to get a steady job (but instead continue repeatedly setting up their own failing businesses). Granted, if you do it on the side or quite well, more power to you, but I have seen several situations in which people are so avid about not working a regular job that their family suffers. Also, being friends with people in pyramid-type jobs is incredibly annoying.


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