A friend sent me this, and I thought it was interesting. It was only a matter of time before someone figured out how to monetize the Dan Bilzerian Life...
So when it comes to MLM schemes, what's the #1 thing that people buy?
In almost every scheme, it's the opportunity. It's the dream. It's the ability to one day be a badass that sits on a model, playing chess against a friend, who is also sitting on a model, while two models serve as the table for the chess board, and another model massages your back ... just because ... why not?!
Introducing, The Candy Man:
Every single one of this guy's pictures mimics the Dan Bilzerian Life.
Models.
Mansions.
Fancy cars.
The "ideal" life.
So where's the scheme come in?
Well, if you look through his profile, you'll see a couple images out of place:
Each of these images advertises a sales position, but doesn't tell you at all what the sales position is.
Instead, it uses choice words to capture its target market: "young", "driven", "dream", etc.
As for what the CandyMan has to say about it, here's his post:
He mentions absolutely nothing about what he does, but keeps it vague enough where typical MLM-ers can buy in.
He also doesn't have a company website, so the only thing suckers can go off of is the lifestyle pictures he posts. His sales pitch is set up perfectly so that everyone naive and hoping to become the CandyMan gets suckered in.
I'm never in support of MLM's ...
But what this guy ... and all the guys behind the scenes have done ... is absolutely amazing.
Well played CandyMan. Well played.
So when it comes to MLM schemes, what's the #1 thing that people buy?
In almost every scheme, it's the opportunity. It's the dream. It's the ability to one day be a badass that sits on a model, playing chess against a friend, who is also sitting on a model, while two models serve as the table for the chess board, and another model massages your back ... just because ... why not?!
Introducing, The Candy Man:
Every single one of this guy's pictures mimics the Dan Bilzerian Life.
Models.
Mansions.
Fancy cars.
The "ideal" life.
So where's the scheme come in?
Well, if you look through his profile, you'll see a couple images out of place:
Each of these images advertises a sales position, but doesn't tell you at all what the sales position is.
Instead, it uses choice words to capture its target market: "young", "driven", "dream", etc.
As for what the CandyMan has to say about it, here's his post:
He mentions absolutely nothing about what he does, but keeps it vague enough where typical MLM-ers can buy in.
He also doesn't have a company website, so the only thing suckers can go off of is the lifestyle pictures he posts. His sales pitch is set up perfectly so that everyone naive and hoping to become the CandyMan gets suckered in.
I'm never in support of MLM's ...
But what this guy ... and all the guys behind the scenes have done ... is absolutely amazing.
Well played CandyMan. Well played.
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