MLM Training
MLM Millionaire Training Course
MLM Training Articles
MLM Leads
|
"Debunking the Myths of MLM, Part I:
The Myth of the Heavy-Hitter"
We’ve heard the myth a thousand times and in as many
different ways.
- The company places all the heavy-hitters under
themselves.
- They keep the cream and leave us with the crumbs.
- If you’re not the heavy-hitter then you’re the heavy-
hitters grunt.
- The only way spillover works is if you’re under a heavy-
hitter.
- Heavy-hitters have all kinds of money to put into it.
- If you don’t have tons of money you’ll never be a heavy-
hitter.
- If you’re not a heavy-hitter you’re not going to make it
in MLM.
You’ve got your own to add to the list.
The point here is that these statements imply that there is
a state of being in this business, a position one reaches
when one becomes a heavy-hitter, and that being a heavy-
hitter or having a heavy-hitter in our organization is
necessary to succeed.
Poppycock!
I’m a business person and as such I have genuine business
goals with real financial milestones attached to them. But
nowhere in my business plan is there the milestone become a
heavy-hitter. I want to make a certain amount of money (a
lot).
I want to cultivate a certain number of contacts and
marketing partners (enough to do some of the work for me). I
want to be sufficiently knowledgeable about my craft (so
that I can be a good sponsor and trainer). These are all my
legitimate business goals. Being a heavy-hitter just isn’t
on the list. And I’m willing to bet it’s not on yours
either.
It’s a myth; an allusion to a state of being or a state of
accomplishment to which one can ascribe a label - heavy-
hitter. I intend to debunk the myth with fact.
I’ll start by saying that I’ve been called a heavy-hitter;
sometimes as a compliment, sometimes with a hint of
resentment, sometimes in condescension. At no time has it
ever been true. I’m not a heavy-hitter. I’m a hard worker,
yes.
I’m focused and determined, I’ve had some successes and I’ve
had some failures, and some months I work harder than
others. I haven’t met all my financial objectives but I’ve
made good progress. When all is said and done all I am is a
hard worker with a plan and a determination to see that plan
through. I’m not a heavy-hitter.
In the four years that I've been in network marketing I've
tried to mirror, right down to the dime, everything my
sponsor does. I buy as many leads at exactly the same time,
promote the same programs, provide the same quantity and
quality of support and communication to my downline as
provided me, and every other manner of duplication that I
can. And I keep feeling like I just never get the same
results.
But the fact is I can’t mirror exactly what my sponsor has
done because I haven’t been at it long enough to do
everything my sponsor has done. I can’t get the results of
fifteen years of experience because I don’t have fifteen
years of experience.
This business is about the cumulative effect of work.
Organizations grow over time, loyalty grows over time,
commissions grow over time, and the experienced marketer
evolves over time. We are all, over time, becoming
experienced network marketers.
The fact is that those we label heavy-hitters are just the
ones who have been at it the longest. They have spent years
building contacts and earning the trust of their people by
being helpful sponsors. They can go into a new program and
get a lot of people right away because they already have
many people who already trust them and who will join with
them.
Online, some of the people who are thought of as heavy
hitters have opt-in lists that are very large. So when they
join a new program they immediately e-mail that opt-in list
and build a downline very quickly.
But those same experienced marketers can have success in one
program and completely bomb out in another program and the
factors contributing to their success or failure are exactly
the same as the factors contributing to everyone else’s
(like product and economy). They don’t succeed because they
are heavy-hitters.
What about sponsoring the so called heavy-hitter? What about
the idea that having a heavy-hitter in your downline is the
only way to succeed? In Linda’s course she talks a lot about
why it's better to work at sponsoring a lot of serious
people, whether they are experienced or not. She explains
very well how people who will work and sponsor a few people
apiece are worth any number of so called heavy-hitters
because it’s more than enough over time to build a good
income. And besides, sponsoring the so called heavy-hitter
is no guarantee that they’ll seriously work your program.
But if you’re not yet convinced that the heavy-hitter is
just a myth, if you still believe that you need to be a
heavy-hitter to sponsor a heavy-hitter consider this: no
matter how heavy you hit you don't sponsor a lot of people
until you have something to offer that makes people want to
join under you.
No experienced and successful marketer is going to join a
program under someone who has never sponsored another person
and has absolutely nothing to offer them. Why would they?
They're experienced enough to know that it is always better
to join an MLM program under a group of people that can add
to what they have to offer. For us, it's our support sites
and our lead generating programs. What is it for you?
In a future article, The Role of the Media in Perpetuating
the Myths of MLM I’ll talk about how the media perpetuates
this myth about the heavy-hitter and what some of the
reasons might be that we buy into their spin on it.
For now I’ll just leave you with this undisputable fact: the
heavy-hitter with a large enough budget and opt-in list to
throw at a new program and then do nothing more than walk
away and rake in the dough, isn’t reality.
You can spend your very last advertising dollar trying to
find yourself a heavy-hitter and you will have thrown it all
away.
It’s a myth. We would do well to eradicate the term from our
collective vocabulary. It is not a legitimate business goal.
It is not a measurable state of being or achievement. It is
not a realizable recruit. It’s a myth of the business.
Darlene Loebel has been a full-time network marketer for the
past 4 years. Along with Linda Bruton, she co-manages the
MLM Millionaire Training Systems website.
For cutting edge tips, tricks, resources, and tools to build
your MLM business online, be sure to visit our online
MLM
Resource Center.
Related Links:
© 2003 MLM Millionaire Training Systems, Inc.
|