Tuesday, October 8, 2013

My Offer : Join MyFunLife - Look at this FIRST !

Limited to max 5 Persons :

Here is My Offer : If you decide to join this wonderful program under me, I will add your link in my promotional efforts at total ad explosion, I will work for you in order to help you get your first reff....and If you wish to join  allinoneprofits.com, I will also buy you FIP Ticket for your first month membership fee.

These two program are amazing and the best in its industry....

Kindest Regards

Join MyFunLife Below



Saturday, October 5, 2013

I did not find a reason not to join myfunlife

Dear Readers,

From my point of view, there're  at least two reasons why we should consider to become a Myfunlife member :

  1. It's a 6.3 Trillion Per Year Industry, just imagine by joining MyFunLife you have the chance to tap into this giant industry, something so big for so little..($25 per month )
  2. Since the world become more and more "internetize", people tend to use internet to fulfill their travel and vacation need. so, by owning a travel booking engine we have the chance to create more and more sales from our engine  just by promoting it. Even free members are entitled to this engine. Let say someone books a trip of $2000 from your engine and let say again the company earns just $200 in commissions, the result is 50% of the the company's commission would be yours ( $100 commission on a single sale). isn't it a big deal ?
I'm just talking about earning from the products/services in this post, not to mention how much will you earn from the matrix 3X10. 

kindest regards
nyoman suadnyana



Thursday, October 3, 2013

Analyzing The Company Pay Plan

I've Found something on net that I Think I have to Share With You.
This article is the answer to my question : " what drives me to join a network marketing company most ?

here is the brief answer and I feel more than Just enlightened........

One of the most important aspects to consider in a company is its compensation plan — the set of rules that dictates how distributors earn commissions, overrides, bonuses, and other compensation.

A Little History

After decades of classic door to door direct selling by the Fuller Brush Man, multilevel sales plans rose to popularity in the 1950s and 1960s (Amway, Mary Kay, and Shaklee), which allowed distributors to earn money not only on their own direct sales, but also to earn override commissions on the sales of the salespeople they recruited, the sales of the salespeople recruited by their recruits, and so on down the line. In the early programs — before the advance of computer technology — it was difficult for a company to manage all the downline information and payouts. So they usually allowed only "direct distributors" to buy directly from the company. These people would then sell products to the distributors in their downlines, collecting payment from them, and paying them their commissions, bonuses, and overrides.
Today, thanks to affordable, powerful computers, as well as efficient delivery systems such as UPS and Federal Express, there is no longer a need for direct distributors to act as go-betweens. The new companies and most of the older ones now allow all distributors to purchase directly from the company.

Go for the Goals

When choosing a company to join, the most important factor is not the type of compensation plan, but whether that plan is achieving important goals for distributors. Alfred White, senior management consultant at San Diego-based Hamilton LaRonde & Associates, Inc. recommends evaluating each company you are considering against the following characteristics of a good compensation plan:
  1. Is it easy to enter into the opportunity? You should only have to buy a modestly priced sales kit.
  2. Are you rewarded primarily for direct sales, rather than for override commissions?
  3. Are you rewarded for personally sponsoring others?
  4. Are you rewarded for recruiting multiple levels?
  5. Is the focus on selling products to the end consumer, rather than to your downline?
  6. Are you rewarded for training and supporting your downline?
  7. Are you rewarded for high personal volume?
  8. Are you rewarded for high group volume?
  9. Are you rewarded for maintaining a monthly volume?
  10. Does the plan provide for recognition?
  11. Does the plan offer nonmonetary rewards and incentives, such as trips or cars?
  12. Is the plan's monthly maintenance requirement reasonable - not so high that you can never achieve it, and thus never receive compensation?
Conversely, here are some compensation plan characteristics that should send you running in the opposite direction:
  1. A plan that does nothing to discourage deadweight distributors and nonproducers.
  2. A plan that encourages inventory loading or large investments in products.
  3. A plan that emphasizes gimmicks rather than product sales.

Four Major Types of Plans

There are many different varieties of compensation plans out there. They often have exotic names. But they tend to be variations on four major types of plans….
The Unilevel Plan
In this plan, recruits do not advance to positions above basic distributors, regardless of their performance. According to White, the principal advantage of the unilevel plan is that it’s easy for companies to administer and for distributors to explain to potential recruits.
Its chief disadvantage is its lack of flexibility in achieving some of the goals mentioned earlier. In addition, unilevel plans are limited in depth of levels of payment which inhibits deep sales organizations. Instead, front line width occurs which may cause sponsors to be "thin" in support. Over time, most companies that start with unilevel plans adapt them to look more like a stairstep breakaway plan.
The Stairstep Breakaway Plan
This is the oldest and most common type of network marketing compensation plan. After meeting certain performance criteria, a distributor advances in rank and "breaks away" from his or her original sponsorship line. The original sponsor receives a percentage override on the sales of the entire breakaway organization. In a way, a stairstep breakaway plan is a unilevel plan with the flexibility to motivate distributors to perform and advance.
Its chief advantage, says White, is that it has a good track record, is easy to modify, is accepted by regulatory agencies, and is driven by volume and performance.
The primary disadvantage of this plan is that it is sometimes so complicated that it’s difficult to explain to new recruits. Another disadvantage is that if the company does not monitor its distributors, they tend to get involved in inventory loading. And sometimes, there is an unreasonably high ongoing monthly personal purchase volume requirement.
Nevertheless, the stairstep breakaway plan remains the most tried-and-true type of plan out there today — and the most likely to survive in the decades to come.

The Matrix Plan
This plan looks like a grid in which a distributor is limited to a certain number of recruits at each level. For example, in a 3-by-5 matrix, each level down to five can have only three downline distributors.
This type of plan is sometimes considered to be more gimmicky than others. Why? Because due to the width limitations, new recruits may find themselves placed underneath upline distributors who did not directly recruit them. In a three-wide matrix, for instance, the fourth distributor you personally sponsor would be placed under one of the first three distributors you personally sponsored (your first-level distributors).
This automatic filling of spots in the matrix can be attractive to novice distributors if they sign on with strong leaders who help fill their grids. Also, it works well in companies where most of the products are used by the distributors, rather than sold to outside consumers.
Matrix plans have been subjected to attacks by regulatory agencies because they sometimes look like "a game." By and large, they have not had a successful record in the industry, and they foster nonproducers, which makes the upline distributors resentful. Nevertheless, several major companies operate matrix plans. Only time will tell whether these plans are here to stay.

Binary Plan
The binary plan is the newest on the scene. In a binary plan, a distributor is allowed to occupy one or more "business centers," each limited to two downline legs. Compensation is paid on group volume of the downline legs rather than a percentage of sales of multiple levels of distributors. In other words, payment is volume driven rather than level driven. Sales volume must be balanced in the two legs to be eligible for commissions, which are paid at designated points when target levels of group sales are achieved. The distributor may occupy multiple positions and may re-enter or loop below other two leg matrices in which he or she has been active. There is no depth limit on payment but each matrix has a finite amount that can be paid out, thus necessitating involvement in multiple two leg matrices. Payment in binaries is often on a weekly basis.
Proponents of binaries cite several advantages. First, they like the weekly payout. Since it is a series of two leg matrices, it is simple to explain. Group cooperation is promoted because payout is on group volume and requires balancing of volume in each leg to be eligible for payout. Some call it more democratic because of the limitation on payout in each matrix, the unlimited depth of payout, and the allowance of looping or re-entry.
On the other hand, the binary is the most controversial of plans. The binary had its unfortunate origins in the early 1990s in fraudulent gold coin programs, and its use later for other questionable products did not help. Those subsequent products were generally high-ticket one-time purchases such as consumer service or travel memberships, travel certificates or overpriced prepaid phone cards. By the end of the 1990s, and after many legal challenges, the binary was not in great favor, and only companies like USANA, that had applied the concept to consumables, seemed to be around.
Critics charged that the implementation of binary plans brought on legal and business problems. Companies and distributors tended to promote the plan rather than the product, creating accusations of a "money game." Often plans had a one-time sale requirement which created a something-for-nothing atmosphere and appearance of payment for headhunting recruitment. The multiple business center approach was often presented as a "purchase of a business center," an "investment," or a "front-load" of product. The ability to stack personal business centers also created the possibility of front-loading. The required balancing of sales volume between legs meant that hard work might yield no payoff and income would be forfeited, because personal production did not count if balanced sales volume did not occur. Finally, the multiple re-entry or looping created a "game-like" atmosphere in which an individual could end up in the downline of someone he or she had sponsored. For the distributor looking long term at a distributorship that might be sold, this "looping" also made it virtually impossible to place a value on a distributorship because no continuous downline genealogy could exist.

Last But Not Least

Here are some final yet important aspects of a compensation plan to check out:

Overall Payout
How much of the sales dollar does the compensation plan pay out to its distributors? Most plans pay between 35 and 45 percent of the company’s wholesale purchase volume, and about 30 percent of suggested retail volume. Look for a plan that divides the pie in your favor, without going overboard. A plan that is overly "generous" to its distributors can run itself into financial ruin. And that’s bad for everyone.

Orphan Commissions
When distributors fail to qualify to earn the commissions or bonuses on their purchase volume in a given month (usually because they fall short of the minimum purchase qualifying amount), the commissions they would otherwise have earned are called "orphan" commissions. Avoid plans in which orphan commissions return to the company. A plan should be structured in a way that orphan commissions "roll up" to the next qualifying distributor that month, rather than return to the company. This approach is also called "compression." Orphan commissions from terminated distributors should be handled the same way.

Lock-In
Look for a plan that has the lock-in feature; that is, when you reach a certain level, you "lock in" and cannot be demoted because of a temporary drop in monthly performance.

Other Perks
The compensation plans of most companies offer at least some perks for top performance above and beyond commissions and bonuses. These come in many forms: company cars, health insurance, free training, lead and co-op advertising programs. A few publicly traded companies even offer stock or stock options.

No matter what other advantages a plan might have, always ask this pivotal question: "Does it emphasize getting products or services into the hands of consumers; or does it emphasize making money by finding new recruits? If it falls into the latter category, run away — fast. In the end, says White, it’s the product — not the compensation plan — that drives success.
(thanks to Jeffrey A. Babener, the principal attorney in the Portland, Oregon law firm of Babener & Associates, represents many of the leading direct selling companies in the United States and abroad)


kindest regards
nyoman suadnyana

Review : Why MyFunLife Business Will Be HUGE

Why MFL will be huge ?
the main reason is that MFL Products/services are in high demands worldwide.

please review this facts :

Tourism is a rapidly growing industry and has far-reaching economic and environmental impact across the world.

The growth of tourism

In 2010, 940 million people were recorded as arriving in a country from abroad because of tourism. This is worth $919 billion dollars, making tourism one of the world's largest industries. (Source: World Tourism Organization (UNWTO))
A graph to show growth in tourism
Growth in tourism measured by international arrivals
Tourism is also one of the world's fastest-growing industries. In 2010, the Middle East and Asia had the greatest growth of tourists. Europe still has the greatest number of tourists - nearly 500 million in 2010.

International Tourist Arrivals (in millions)


1990199520002005200820092010
Europe261.5304.1385.6439.4485.2461.5476.6
Asia and the pacific55.882.0110.1153.6184.1180.9203.8
Americas92.8109.0128.2133.3147.8140.6149.8
Africa14.818.926.535.444.446.049.5
Middle east9.613.724.136.355.252.960.3

Tourism market growth in 2010 (compared to 2009)


% change
Europe3.3%
Asia and the pacific12.7%
Americas6.4%
Africa7.3%
Middle east14.1%
The tourism industry therefore is very important to economic growth as well as the environment.
Tourism can help a country's economy and infrastructure. For example it provides jobs. Some countries such as the Caribbean have tourism as their main source of income.
 (http://www.bbc.co.uk)

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

MyFunLIFE Corporate Update

Here's I recieved an Update from the corporate regarding to the  change in compensation plan.....
 
September 29, 2013 Exciting Income Explosion Coming to MyFunLIFE

Dear Members,

We have had several leaders come to us over the last couple of months with nearly the exact same requests. After spending a couple of weeks in the Dominican Republic recently, we can no longer deny the overwhelming need to implement this enhancement. At the request of the leaders and in the best interest of our Members, we have decided to increase the income in our Compensation Plan beginning October 1, 2013.

With such tight margins on our $21 Membership product, it didn’t previously seem possible to increase the income in the Compensation Plan. After extensive thought and meetings with various leaders, we have come up with a plan which will work for everyone! By simply raising the cost of the Membership from $21 to just $25, only a $4 dollar increase, it could make over an $800 per month difference in your first 6 levels! Not to mention what it will do to your Matching Bonus checks! This is how the new Compensation Plan enhancement is going to look:

Level 1 - $1.00
Level 2 - $1.00
Level 3 - $1.00 (You can get paid through the 3rd Level without sponsoring a single personal)
Level 4 - $1.00
Level 5 - $1.00
Level 6 - $1.00
Level 7 - $2.00
(You must still qualify for Levels 8, 9, & 10)
Level 8 - $1.00
Level 9 - $1.00
Level 10- $1.00

Our CEO, Mr. Dan Edwards recorded a short video to share his vision and how these changes can bless many more Members of MyFunLIFE. We are truly a company that wants the best for our Members. We will post the video in the Corp News within the next 24 hrs. It is currently being edited.  

The Team Leaders and Corporate Executives all believe these enhancements will help your marketing efforts pay off MUCH quicker, so this price change will take effect October 1, 2013. It has been a unanimous decision with everyone we have talked to and we are sure you will be excited about the enhancements as well.

To Your Prosperity,
MyFunLIFE Corporate Team


PS: Check out our newest promo video! We are getting rave reviews and think you will feel the same way.


MyFunLIFE Corporate YouTube


Sunday, September 29, 2013

Don' Be Misleaded By "I will give you 6 Paid sign up" Claim

Hello Fellow Marketers !,

Someone recently told me he's joining an MLM company because they promised him "excess cash spillover". I told him, "They are lying to you." The guy called me back later and said, "I point-blank asked them if I'd get people put underneath me, and the guy said, "Well, we can't guarantee that.""

Spillover - Creating a Welfare Mentality


Good people don't want welfare. They want to build it themselves. They just want to learn the skills they need to build this business and create residual income, money that's coming in week after week, year after year, and they can will it to their children's children. When you look at a lot of network marketing websites, you often see that word SPILLOVER. The proposition, more or less, is, get in now, today, and you'll get all this spillover.

In 7 years, I have never, ever, ever seen anybody get spillover, having somebody build it for them. And if you look closely at the compensation plans of the companies that promote spillover, you'll find out that those who get spillover usually don't get paid on it. There are other hoops to jump through to get paid on that spillover, and these people rarely ever qualify. So it's the person who actually does the work who gets the pay what a novel idea!
MLM Companies use "spillover" as a tool to drag in people who think they can build a business without doing any work. In other words, no sponsoring, no recruiting. It targets that type of person.

When You Say Spillover, You Are Targeting Quitters!


When you see a network marketing company that promotes spillover on their website, they're looking for welfare-minded people. The problem for you is, you can't build with these people, unless YOU do all the work! That's what they expect. And when you don't build their business, they'll be off somewhere else, looking for a better welfare plan. So really, when you or your company promote spillover, you are targeting people who will not be with you long-term. And in network marketing, that makes absolutely no sense. The failure rate will be 100%. And Here's Why The Leads You Buy Tell You To Go Pound Sand!


The quickest way to build a hugelist is to offer the moon and require nothing (no money, no work, no purchase) in return. You'll see companies promoting "we've signedup more people faster than anybody else in the history of network marketing."
(Thanks to Dee And Jee Wealth Consults for sharing this inspiring post)


Ready For The Race ?










My MyFunLIFE Short Review : where is the money from ?

A real business opportunity must generate money from a real business too...
 
How MyfunLife Actually Makes Money ?

There are two sources of income :

  1. Commissions generated from sales of products/services. MyFunLIFE gets amazing deals by partnering with some of the best travel companies in the world. It will continue to build and maintain these partnerships so that its Members will always have the best deals available. 
  2. A Percentage of Membership Fee.   Based on my point of view, the matrix model (3X10) adopted by the company is not a "100% commission" model, so there must be a percentage of the fee kept by the company as a source of income....

In order to maximize your earnings with MyFunLife, you should consider the 2 principles :

  • Promote your  personal Chaching Booking Engine in order to generate sales, and
  • Promotw MyFunLife Website in order to grow your Network

How much you can earn from those two ways ? learn more at Compensation Plan above

Ready For The Race ?



kindest regards
nyoman suadnyana