Agel Enterprises on the cover looks like a great opportunity for the average person to create success. They have hip and trendy looking products, flashy field leadership and a good story. What about Agel caused me to leave? What did I see that caused me to get out?
Agel's team members receive fixed volumes of their products on specified dates under a system known as autoship. There is a commission for selling these, i.e. $6.50 for selling two cases of the stuff. This in itself is hardly gives the members any income worth its name. Then how do Agel's marketers keep going? To make any reasonable money, they have to go on recruiting people right and left into the two lines under them. A recruiter is entitled to $200 for initiating a recruit into the higher line under him and $35 for initiating a recruit into the lower line. The higher and lower membership categories are fixed on the basis of the monthly autoship volume recruits agree to buy. The recruiter is also entitled to commissions on the volumes his team members sell. In short, without a long line of recruits trailing behind him as toiling ants, a member has no survival.
Agel Enterprises' products are considered an innovation in the field of nutrition. Its wonderful nutrients come decked up as enticing gels and are supposed to charm consumers as much by its taste as by its health benefits. That may be true. But its prices are not as seductive and are above the affordable range of most. About $200 worth of its products are necessary to provide a single individual with enough nutrition for one month. Prices are kept high enough to ensure the company's financial health above everything else.
Agel cannot be relied upon to provide a steady income. Income is dependent solely on the high number of enlistments one can make. In practical experience it is found that most people cannot manage it. Enlists drop out all the time. Though there could be small bursts of successes when team enrolment is high, it is disappointing most of the time.
Agel Enterprises is a standard network marketing company with average products and an average compensation plan. While I believe Agel is not a scam, someone will need 1000's of people to create any kind of mentionable income. - 16089
Agel's team members receive fixed volumes of their products on specified dates under a system known as autoship. There is a commission for selling these, i.e. $6.50 for selling two cases of the stuff. This in itself is hardly gives the members any income worth its name. Then how do Agel's marketers keep going? To make any reasonable money, they have to go on recruiting people right and left into the two lines under them. A recruiter is entitled to $200 for initiating a recruit into the higher line under him and $35 for initiating a recruit into the lower line. The higher and lower membership categories are fixed on the basis of the monthly autoship volume recruits agree to buy. The recruiter is also entitled to commissions on the volumes his team members sell. In short, without a long line of recruits trailing behind him as toiling ants, a member has no survival.
Agel Enterprises' products are considered an innovation in the field of nutrition. Its wonderful nutrients come decked up as enticing gels and are supposed to charm consumers as much by its taste as by its health benefits. That may be true. But its prices are not as seductive and are above the affordable range of most. About $200 worth of its products are necessary to provide a single individual with enough nutrition for one month. Prices are kept high enough to ensure the company's financial health above everything else.
Agel cannot be relied upon to provide a steady income. Income is dependent solely on the high number of enlistments one can make. In practical experience it is found that most people cannot manage it. Enlists drop out all the time. Though there could be small bursts of successes when team enrolment is high, it is disappointing most of the time.
Agel Enterprises is a standard network marketing company with average products and an average compensation plan. While I believe Agel is not a scam, someone will need 1000's of people to create any kind of mentionable income. - 16089
About the Author:
Joshua Valentine is a top internet marketer who works with industry leaders from around the world. He has a passion for helping others achieve their goals, dreams and aspirations. To learn more about Joshua Valentine and his team of Marketing Mentors Click Here