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How was the pole dancing thing an mlm? Were they selling the poles, or lingerie? I think I'm all for the pole dancing parties, but I bet I'm not invited, since I'm a male. ha ha
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Funny but I had this happen recently. There was a woman who bought an IFP plan and then wanted me to be her "customer" for some kind of phone network marketing company called ACN or something like that. I told her I was not interested, that I had a long-term contract with my phone company... and she was OK with it. (Ended up writing her mom an MA plan when she moved here from LA.)
Recently I wrote a small group and on the day of the enrollment, in the waiting area among the magazines were several copies of a catalog for Jafra which is a high-end cosmetic company. It seems the benefits administrator whom I'd been dealing with for months during the pre-sale was a Jafra rep. She never said a word about it. I took a catalog and had my wife order some goops and creams (yeah, like I had to FORCE her! Right!) and I bought some cologne. Total came to about $80. The bene-admin was REALLY happy about that... and it cost me pocket change compared to what I will make on the group.
Usually I give clients a gift certificate to a local Italian restaurant or a book store but this was more "personal." (Always use local businesses for gift certificates and not chains like Starbucks, because you will get THEM as customers sooner or later as well!)
No sure how this is relevant to the thread... but what the $#@!.
Al
InsuranceSolutions123 Agency
How was the pole dancing thing an mlm? Were they selling the poles, or lingerie? I think I'm all for the pole dancing parties, but I bet I'm not invited, since I'm a male. ha ha
I have it happen to me, especially PPL, I just tell them my compliance dept and E&O won't allow me to participate, sure wish I could. They understand and it is end of discussion.
In my first year I was selling life insurance to a couple at a local coffee shop. An MLM marketer had the guts to inturepet us and say he overheard our "financial" conversation and wanted to introduce himself. To get rid of him, we exchanged business cards and he left.
Sure enough, I get a phone call the next morning. He called me to pitch his "business opportunity" and I asked him about his life insurance. I agreed to meet him, although I told him up front it probably wouldn't be a fit. We met at the same coffee shop and I walked out with an application and he understood why I wasn't a fit for his program. He still has the policy inforce, however, he's done with the MLM game.