Your Time Is Now - Network marketing soared in the 90's... and
the best is yet to come
Corporate America has been downsizing and job security has faded
into dimly remembered history.
Statistics show that most new jobs now come from small business.
Home-based business has become a reality for millions of
Americans - inspiring millions more to dream about opening one.
The term "networking" has become a buzzword in the business
press, as more people realize the crucial role of referrals in
the economy.
The Internal Revenue Service has adapted its rules (somewhat) to
the new home-based economy by recognizing independent contractor
status and publishing specific tax-preparation guidelines for
"direct sellers." In Tune with the Times
There are a number of reasons why the network marketing industry
reached maturity and respect in the 1990s. As millions of
Americans launched home-based businesses and entrepreneurial
ventures of every kind, they created a climate in which network
marketing could flourish. For instance, it was not so strange
anymore for an attorney to leave his practice in order to run a
new company of some kind out of his den. Most people have come
to know someone who dropped out of the 9-to-5 world and turned
entrepreneurial. Hourly and salaried employees have become
intrigued with the idea of financial freedom and economic
autonomy. Suddenly, they are much more open to change - and
better prospects for network marketing.
Another change that favors the networking industry has to do
with sex. In the past, most direct sellers were women. As a
result, this was often seen as a woman's business, which tended
to discourage male recruits. But as opportunities in the
industry have increased, more men have been attracted to it; in
turn, the all-female perception has faded, increasing the
industry's ability to attract men.
The sheer number of network marketers also has exploded. By the
end of the 1990s, more than 10 million people were involved in
the industry here in the U.S., racking up more than $20 billion
in yearly sales. Worldwide, the number of distributors has
topped 30 million, generating more than $80 billion in annual
sales.
When an industry gets that big, even corporate bureaucrats begin
to notice. Major multinational corporations are taking account
of the networking phenomenon, building it into their own plans
for distributing products and services. Here are a few of the
marketing partnerships that have been formed: Avon-Mattel;
Tupperware-Disney; Amway-Rubbermaid; DuPont /ConAgra-Legacy. The
new "virtual networking" company will outsource almost all its
activities: manufacturing, customer service - even accounting.
One of the world's largest banks, Citigroup - formed of the
merger between Citibank and Traveler's Group - has a network
marketing division, Primerica Financial Services (formerly the
A.L. Williams Company) that is one of the most profitable
distribution channels for the corporation's many financial
products. These range from insurance policies to checking
accounts.
Corporate America has validated the success of the industry by
embracing public offerings of network marketing companies on
Wall Street. Excel Telecommunications, Amway Asia-Pacific, and
Nu Skin all successfully launched initial public stock offerings
on major exchanges. Herbalife, Mannatech, Market America,
Nature's Sunshine, Pre-Paid Legal, and Rexall, to name a few,
are also publicly traded.
In the 1990s, high-tech and financial companies became enamored
of the networking industry, as network marketing companies
broadened their lines to include services as well as consumer
products. Soon, it seemed every high-tech company was looking to
networking as a means of guerrilla distribution in competitive
markets. Companies in telecommunications, paging, Internet
service, satellite TV, financial, and travel services were the
chief beneficiaries of alliances with networking companies.
Today, even electric power is being sold by network marketing.
Why did conventional corporations cast their lot with the wild
and woolly entrepreneurs of the network marketing industry?
Because they could see that it works. Specifically, network
marketing distribution has several distinct advantages:
It is a powerful technique for introducing brand-new products -
especially items that require demonstration or testimonials.
It generates strong "word of mouth," by directly rewarding
consumers for sharing their excitement about a company's
products or services.
Network marketing techniques can penetrate new markets quickly.
Since commissions are only paid on actual sales and since
word-of-mouth replaces costly advertising campaigns, network
distribution is an efficient and economical way to market a
product or service.
Going Global
As it entered whole new business categories in the 1990s, the
network industry also planted its flag in dozens of new markets
around the world. Amway and Nu Skin had singular successes in
Japan, which proved to be as amenable to network marketing as
the industry's birthplace, the U.S.A. Nu Skin pioneered global
seamless sponsoring, which allows a distributor to sponsor
people living anywhere in the world into one down-line
organization - as long as the corporation does business in the
country where the recruit lives. For many of the largest
networking companies, sales outside the U.S. proved to be the
majority. The Internet, global communication, and satellite TV
provided the tools for global expansion.
It wasn't just Yankees who have been on the march during this
decade. Many foreign-based networking companies set up shop in
the U.S. One of the major success stories of the 1990s - health
products giant Nikken - came to the U.S. from Fukuoka, Japan, at
the beginning of the decade with virtually no American customer
base. Nikken posted annual U.S. sales in the hundreds of
millions by the end of the decade and established its new
worldwide headquarters in California. Read All About It Finally,
the decade just ending has seen a sea-change in media and public
perceptions of the network marketing industry. In the 1980s, the
press acknowledged the existence of network marketing - but the
attention was often negative. Stories had names like "The mess
called MLM" and "Here come the scam artists." Some of the abuses
cited were real, but good companies were usually lumped together
with bad - effectively misinforming the public about a major
industry.
In recent years, this trend has begun to turn around. Positive
stories on network marketing have appeared in The Wall Street
Journal, Inc., Success, Entrepreneur, Wealth Building, Business
Startups and Home Office Computing. Articles continued to treat
the industry to its dose of honest criticism, but they also
began to include the positive side: the fact that millions of
Americans were finding opportunity where they had never expected
to see it - among their relatives, friends, neighbors, and
colleagues.
Unless you have been living in a cave, you can't have missed
experts' predictions that the Internet will be one of the most
powerful business forces in the 21st Century. As available
bandwidth increases, ever more information - and more money -
will be exchanged over the Net. As a future-oriented industry,
network marketing will respond, adopting the new technology
enthusiastically.
The Internet will become the prime means of communication,
training, and ordering for network marketing distributors. Sales
kits and videos may become obsolete as sophisticated multimedia
demonstrations on laptops (and over e-mail) become the main
recruiting tool, and cyberspace becomes the chief venue for
training. The Internet will encourage rapid expansion on a
global scale with instantaneous communication between network
marketing corporate headquarters and the distributor force.
Documentation, sales kits, distributor agreements, and policies
and procedures will reside primarily on Web sites, where new
prospects can download them. (Courts already recognize
electronic signatures as binding.) Distributors will order
directly from the Net, reducing the need for call centers and
human operators.
Companies will pay commissions by direct deposit to bank
accounts or credit card accounts. The new, "virtual networking"
company will out-source almost all its activities: private-label
manufacturing, customer service, fulfillment, graphics - even
genealogy and account processing. The technology revolution will
level the playing field.
But don't let all this technological razzle-dazzle distract you
from the basics. Regardless of what gadgets they adopt, the
network marketing companies that succeed will always be those
that maintain their respect for personal relationships. Get as
virtual as you like - you will always need to get out there and
press the flesh.