What they say:
- Quit your 9–5
- High income potential
- Live the life you dream of
- Flexible schedule
- Be your own boss
What actually happens:
- The core truth: MLM is a legal business model, but it is structured in a way where the vast majority of people will not make money
- While it’s marketed as flexible and high-income, the reality often includes:
- upfront costs
- ongoing expenses
- pressure to sell and recruit
- and a saturated market
- Most people lose money. Studies consistently show that around 99% of participants do not profit when expenses are included
- What they don’t tell you is how much you’ll spend:
- starter kits
- inventory
- training materials
- events, travel, and conferences
👉 These costs add up quickly and are rarely highlighted upfront
- Income disclosures can be misleading. They often:
- exclude inactive members
- show gross income, not profit
- highlight top earners instead of typical results
- The structure benefits those at the top.
👉 A small percentage of people make most of the money—often from the purchases and efforts of those below them - There is often a heavy focus on recruitment. Even in legal MLMs, the system can lean toward:
“build a team” over “sell a product”
- Inventory loading is common. You may be encouraged—or required—to buy products to:
- stay active
- qualify for bonuses
- maintain rank
👉 This can leave you with products you cannot sell
- Relationships can become part of the business.
👉 Friends and family often become your first customers—and sometimes your only ones - The emotional side is rarely discussed:
- If it doesn’t work, you’re often made to feel like it’s your fault
- “You didn’t try hard enough”
- “You didn’t believe enough”
👉 when in reality, the structure itself is the issue
What they don’t tell you:
- Not all MLMs are identical—but most follow the same core structure and patterns
- Many operate in a gray area:
- legally compliant
- but heavily dependent on recruitment to sustain growth
- Ongoing costs are often required to stay eligible for commissions or bonuses—even if labeled “optional”
- Training often emphasizes:
- recruiting others
- duplicating the system
- and promoting the opportunity—not just the product
🔍 Final verdict:
❌ Not a reliable way to make money for the majority of people
⚠️ Only worth considering if you fully understand the structure, costs, and risks—and are comfortable with them
💡 Reality check:
MLMs are not “easy businesses” or shortcuts to financial freedom.
At best, they are:
👉 a high-effort, low-probability income model
Simnply,
Tabby