Monavie Scam – Is MonaVie Really a Scam?
Posted in Uncategorized on July 6th, 2010 by admin – Comments OffIn the last few years the Baby Boomer generation has begun to take a vested interest in their health. Along with this interest has come a major new industry in health related products. The most common health products on the market are a tremendous range of health juices and drinks that have been touted as being able to do everything from help you lose weight to cure cancer. This is where the Monavie scam comes in as it is one of the products involved in the industry.
Before you go too far into the whole Monavie scam story you need to have at least a basic understanding of how MonaVie got started. The whole MonaVie program started when the founder of the company, Daillin Larsen a 17 year veteran of the direct marketing world decided he wanted to produce a product that brought the Açai berry and its purported health benefits to more people. However rather than creating a juice that contained only Açai berries he had a team of researchers create a juice that also contained 19 other fruit juices.
The Monavie scam can be split into different aspects and each has their own merit, combined together you are going to find we so many people consider the whole program to be a scam. As with anything you should make your own decision based on the facts. First and most importantly of all the drink is not made from 100% freeze dried berries from Sambazon considered to be the source of the best Açai berries. It is in fact made up of both freeze dried berries and puree of the berries, which can diminish the quality of the juice.
To become involved it the MonaVie program you are entering into an MLM or multi level marketing program. If you go into such a program with your eyes wide open ,you already know that you are going to be required to not only sell the product, but you are also going to be required to sell the business plan to others. While you can make money selling the product, you will make the bulk of your income by recruiting other to sell not only the product but the business.
This is the bulk of the information that makes people consider Monavie a scam. As long as you understand what you are buying and buying into and make it very clear to your customers there is really not a scam of any kind involved. It falls on the individual independent distributor to uphold the standards of the program and this tends to be where the whole program falls down leading people to consider it a scam.