New distributor survey.
Why did I join network marketing (or insert the name of
your company here)?
(For example: to earn $500 extra a month, to have better health, to learn new skills, to be around more
positive people, to have a full-time career with people, to be my own boss, to earn a car, to learn new
personal development skills, to satisfy a nagging sponsor, etc.)
Why must I be successful in (insert the name of your
company here)?
(For example: to help my daughter go to college, to leave my job and its negative atmosphere, to buy a
house, to spend more time with my family, to prove to myself that I can do it, to have more money to do
the things I want, to show my friends who said that I couldn’t be successful, etc.
Why did I join network marketing (or insert the name of
your company here)?
(For example: to earn $500 extra a month, to have better health, to learn new skills, to be around more
positive people, to have a full-time career with people, to be my own boss, to earn a car, to learn new
personal development skills, to satisfy a nagging sponsor, etc.)
Why must I be successful in (insert the name of your
company here)?
(For example: to help my daughter go to college, to leave my job and its negative atmosphere, to buy a
house, to spend more time with my family, to prove to myself that I can do it, to have more money to do
the things I want, to show my friends who said that I couldn’t be successful, etc.
BONUS ! BONUS !!
A Story of 2 guys, water and a Money
I'd like to tell you a quick story out of "The Cashflow Quadrant", the 2nd book in the "Rich Dad Poor Dad" series, which you may or may not have read.
It's a HUGE eye-opener, and if you've heard it before, it's still a great reminder.
Once upon a time there was a little village... a nice place but with a small problem.
The village had no water unless it rained, so they decided to put out a bid for a contractor to have the water delivered daily.
Two people volunteered and both were awarded the contract.
The first one, Ed, immediately got 2 steel buckets and began running back and forth to the lake a mile away, hauling water to the village.
The second contractor, Bill, instead of hauling buckets to compete with Ed... took some time and built a large volume stainless steel pipeline that connected the village to the lake.
At the Grand Opening of the pipeline, Bill announced that he can supply water 24/7 to the village to meet the demand (Ed could only do it on weekdays)... and could charge less than Ed did.
To compete Ed had to work harder, longer hours... hire his 2 sons to help work on the weekends... until they went to college and never came back for work.
Eventually Ed had employee and union problems, which demanded higher wages, better benefits and didn't want to haul more than 1 bucket at a time.
While Bill realized that other villages had the same problem and simply duplicated his process building other pipelines in the neighboring villages...
... delivering money to himself and water to the villages.
Bill lived happily ever after and Ed worked had for the rest of his life.
The end.
ow let me ask you...
Are you hauling buckets OR building a pipeline?
Are you working HARD... OR are you working SMART?
Futuristic Marketing gives the tools you need to create a "pipeline" to...
- Generate a HUGE number of highly targeted leads...
- AUTOMATICALLY turn those leads into paying customers and business partners...
- AND... a system you can use over and over to literally create money on "DEMAND" by building a "pipeline" from your prospects to your products...
... sending streams of cash into your bank account and giving your prospects EXACTLY what they want.
I'd like to tell you a quick story out of "The Cashflow Quadrant", the 2nd book in the "Rich Dad Poor Dad" series, which you may or may not have read.
It's a HUGE eye-opener, and if you've heard it before, it's still a great reminder.
Once upon a time there was a little village... a nice place but with a small problem.
The village had no water unless it rained, so they decided to put out a bid for a contractor to have the water delivered daily.
Two people volunteered and both were awarded the contract.
The first one, Ed, immediately got 2 steel buckets and began running back and forth to the lake a mile away, hauling water to the village.
The second contractor, Bill, instead of hauling buckets to compete with Ed... took some time and built a large volume stainless steel pipeline that connected the village to the lake.
At the Grand Opening of the pipeline, Bill announced that he can supply water 24/7 to the village to meet the demand (Ed could only do it on weekdays)... and could charge less than Ed did.
To compete Ed had to work harder, longer hours... hire his 2 sons to help work on the weekends... until they went to college and never came back for work.
Eventually Ed had employee and union problems, which demanded higher wages, better benefits and didn't want to haul more than 1 bucket at a time.
While Bill realized that other villages had the same problem and simply duplicated his process building other pipelines in the neighboring villages...
... delivering money to himself and water to the villages.
Bill lived happily ever after and Ed worked had for the rest of his life.
The end.
ow let me ask you...
Are you hauling buckets OR building a pipeline?
Are you working HARD... OR are you working SMART?
Futuristic Marketing gives the tools you need to create a "pipeline" to...
- Generate a HUGE number of highly targeted leads...
- AUTOMATICALLY turn those leads into paying customers and business partners...
- AND... a system you can use over and over to literally create money on "DEMAND" by building a "pipeline" from your prospects to your products...
... sending streams of cash into your bank account and giving your prospects EXACTLY what they want.