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Compliance and MLMs

Although multi-level marketing companies (MLMs) have been selling products and services via “distributor” networks for years, they have shot to prominence in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis. In reaction to long-term unemployment or under-employment and systemic, structural changes to the labor market in many communities, non-traditional workforces such as the non-employee, commission-only participants in MLMs have become more common than ever before in the United States.

MLMs all determine their own compensation scheme and marketing and recruitment strategies, but they do share some similarities with the way they brand themselves and communicate. They operate in diverse industries, from nutrition and fitness/wellness to fashion apparel to jewelry to housewares, but they all are organized around a pyramid-shape commission system, where participants at the top recruit and make residual income from the participants below them on a sliding scale. These business also all rely heavily on worth of mouth marketing, both to sell the products or services on offer as well as to recruit new participants to fill out the levels of the pyramid.

Because of this operation style, MLM participants are expected to promote the products and the company itself very eagerly, often expressing the financial freedom and flexibility that the non-traditional working arrangement has granted them in unstable times and portraying the MLM company as a self-employment or entrepreneurship opportunity. These portrayals are particularly effective with the aid of social media and are prevalent in communities where social connection and employment consistency may be hard to achieve and sustain, such as stay-at-home parents, military spouses, or people who need to work from home for medical or personal reasons.

While some MLMs certainly do offer popular products and present an opportunity for participants to earn at least some income, studies have shown that most participants make no money from their involvement or even lose money due to sunken costs of inventory and personal products they buy and do not or cannot sell. Questions are rampant as to whether many MLMs are pyramid schemes, scams that purport to sell products or services but really just recruit members in order for them to recruit other members.   These schemes are often illegal and seen by many as immoral due to the misleading or even fraudulent representations made to participants to get them to spend money, join, and continue making investments.

To find out more about MLMs, how they have become so ubiquitous in today’s employment market, and the risks they pose to participants and the economy in general, check out the great piece from a 2016 episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.

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