Читать книгу Defcon 1 Direct Selling - Randy Gage - Страница 24
CHAPTER 2 The Sacred Responsibility of Sponsoring
ОглавлениеFor decades I’ve been regaling convention audiences with my story of sponsoring my roommate into the first five companies I joined. (In fact, the story is so funny it’s been stolen by one CEO, two authors, and five other speakers. That I know of.) He joined each time because I agreed to pay for his distributor kit and activation order, for which he promised to repay me from all the money we were both going to be raking in. And in each of those attempts, he was the only person I sponsored!
That system works well to sign up your first recruit quickly but doesn’t work out so well over the long haul. After I reached the point where I couldn’t even convince my roommate to join if I paid for everything, it became apparent I would need to improve my recruiting approach.
Mentally I created a pretty simple equation in my mind. It basically went something like this:
I was broke and I hated being broke.
Most of the people I knew were also broke.
The people in Leveraged Sales made money, earned bonus cars, and went on fancy trips. A lot of them appeared to be rich (and certainly were rich by my standards).
I wanted to be rich.
If I could sign up enough people, I would get rich.
If the people I signed up also signed up enough people, they could get rich too.
That was my basic recruiting presentation. Eventually I got good enough at that pitch to attract and sponsor people who actually paid for their own distributor kit and activation order. I felt assured that I was well on my way to success, because I had conquered the most difficult element of the business: recruiting. I did my part by signing up at least five people and then waited for them to make me rich. (Because I had seen the presentation that said those five would bring in 25, then those 25 would bring in 125, and so on.) It was all I could do to restrain myself from putting down the deposit to order my Ferrari.
Shockingly, I noticed that my five people didn’t seem to be pulling their weight. I checked in with them frequently, reminding them that I needed to be rich and they weren’t doing their part. You’ve probably deduced how well that played out.