Friday, September 23, 2016

Why You Should Avoid Schemes Like The National Wealth Center

By David Baker


The job market can be a treacherous place, and the Online employment boom is no exception. While there are many legitimate ways an individual can make a living online, there are a million bogus sites planning quick wealth as well. Most easy money programs promoted, such as the National Wealth Center, are nothing more than masked pyramid schemes that only benefit those who built it.

Any time an organization is promoting a digital product, the buyer must be wary of what they are signing up for. Most of the time these digital products are not worth the paper they are not written on. In our current information age, most anything a person wishes to learn, or access, is freely available to anyone willing to spend the time to find it.

For anyone looking to sell a product, there are nearly unlimited options. Health and beauty products are most definitely the most popular items available in the online marketplace. These extend beyond cosmetics and into the realm of vitamin supplements, workout equipment, cookbooks, and the list goes on.

Pyramid schemes do not really sell anything at all. By convincing people they have special information to impart and calling this a digital product, they avoid being charged with fraud. At the end of the day, they are selling memberships for affiliates, and the supposed online training teaching one how to start an online business is a load of hogwash.

In the majority of cases, the individuals who creates the scheme from the beginning are the only ones likely to benefit in any real way. Even when they appear legitimate and have a reputation for paying their affiliates like clockwork, this is only a facade of legitimacy. Most of the time people do not stay with the organization for very long, and the only ones who make money are the creators.

The notion is that if they can fool enough people to buy a one-month membership, then they will continue to make money off of these first-time buyers. They do not really care about the quality of the information they call their product. The point is selling memberships more than teaching people how to start a business.

Some sites which actually do have a physical product for sale will require their members to buy their products up front, then sell them for a profit on their own. If one has a sum of money to invest, then they can potentially make a living from one of these organizations. It is important to have potential buyers of the product lined up beforehand to ensure a return on the investment.

When one falls for these scams, their credibility is at stake when they convince others to buy into a bogus information packet. There is very little information or education one must pay for on the Internet which is superior to anything available for free. Do not waste precious time and money filling the pockets of the modern day snake oil salesman.




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