introduction

...the Biosis da Vinci group...

First and foremost we would like to thank you for taking some time to view our humble site. This site was created with the aim of providing some additional information to those interested to know more about Multi-Level-Marketing and also to provide group support to those who want to succeed in MLM. Here you will find various reading materials that could increase your knowledge about MLM. The MLM that this group is involved in is Biosis, a newly formed MLM company from Malaysia.

At Biosis DaVinci group, we are looking for dynamic, hard working individuals who are ambitious and have the desire to succeed. We will work hand in hand every step of the way in order to develop your network with you. Our goal is not to succeed alone, but it is to succeed collectively. Remember we cannot spell SUCCESS without U!

With Biosis, we are given the opportunity to take advantage of the unique health products exclusively available for their distributors and also the generous marketing/compensation plan. With this total package, we not only can look after our health, but we can also increase our wealth. Remember Wealth without Health is pointless and Health without Wealth is let's face it....Tiring. Take the next step. Continue reading to know more about direct selling, Biosis profiles and not forgetting the compensation plan. See you at the top!



 

Your ATTITUDE determines your ALTITUDE!!

  
 

 









 

When Warren Buffett Takes Notice, It's Noticeable 

To be honest, what got me to reconsider my negative attitude about direct selling was Warren Buffett. When I read in Fortune magazine that Warren Buffett, the billionaire investor and one of the world's richest men, was investing in a direct-selling company, I decided maybe I was missing something.

For those of you who are not familiar with Warren Buffett, he's a widely admired, Nebraska-based financial guru (known popularly as "The Oracle of Omaha") who's built a fortune estimated at more than $40 billion. He's done this mainly by making long-term investments in boring, cash-cow industries like insurance and consumer products and soft drinks. So for him to invest in a direct-selling company meant something in that industry must have changed.

Direct Selling--Over $80 Billion a Year and Still Growing

What may have attracted Mr. Buffett's attention to direct selling is the fact that the industry is really booming. According to the Direct Selling Association (DSA), more than 13.6 million Americans were involved in direct selling in 2004, generating total revenues of just under $30 billion. Worldwide, some 47 million participants racked up sales of $88 billion.

Even more impressive (or surprising), studies show that mroe than one in two American adults have purchased goods or services from a direct-selling representative.

Why Consider Direct Selling as a Home-Based Business Opportunity?

I know I'm going out on a limb here by recommending direct selling as a business to consider. I'm doing this because it really can be an excellent
source of additional income. To me, what many people see as a downside to direct selling is actually an upside. The fact that most people don't get rich in this industry, but instead "only" make an extra $500 to $1,000 a month, is exactly what excites me.

As I noted earlier, the average wage earner in America makes around $37,000 a year. If you're in that range, earning an extra $500 to $1,000 a month amounts to an increase in your income of anywhere from 16% to 33%! Saving just a quarter of that could represent the difference between being able to retire and having to work until you drop. And if you're lucky enough to be earning more than the average, the extra income could be what winds up buying you your financial freedom.

 

 








 

 



 

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Direct Selling Fact

What Exactly is Direct Selling? 

Direct selling, network marketing, multilevel marketing, party-plan marketing, and one-to-one marketing are all variations on the same theme. As the DSA defines it, "Direct selling is the sale of a consumer product or service, person to person, away from a fixed retail location." Generally speaking, the person doing the selling is an independent contractor--usually called a distributor or a consultant--who basically contracts with the manufacturer to sell products ranging from nutritional supplements to makeup to rubber stamps. The sales typically take place through in-home product demonstrations, parties (think Tupperware), meetings, or one-on-one interactions ("Avon calling!").

In addition to selling your product, you also recruit others to sell products for you. These so-called "downstream" distributors pay you a percentage of their sales--just as you pay a percentage of your sales "upstream" to the person who recruited you. The idea is to recruit so many people that an increasing amount of your income comes from their efforts, not your own. Indeed, in network and multilevel marketing, recruiting others is often a primary point of the business.




The reason you recruit others is so you can earn passive income from their sales and obtain new customers for your products or services. In truth, the best passive income in direct selling or network marketing comes from satisfied customers reordering products or services you previously sold to them. If the entire business is focused on the recruitment of more sales representatives--and not on the selling or consumption of services or products--something is amiss.


Chances are, the concept of direct selling (or, as it's also called, network marketing, multilevel marketing, party plan marketing, and one-to-one marketing) rings a bell. You may be familiar with it from the likes of a local Avon lady or Mary Kay specialist who may have once rung your doorbell, or from a neighborhood Tupperware party you attended a few years ago. Perhaps you've purchased something from a friend who at some point went into direct selling as a side career.

It's also possible that at some point this kind of business turned you off. If you're like me, maybe someone you know--probably a relative, friend, or coworker--once came up to you and asked, "Can you do me a favor and come to this meeting with me? I'm looking at a new
business opportunity, and I want to share it with you and see what you think."

Because you're a good guy or gal, you said okay--only to find that your friend had suckered you into an "opportunity meeting" for a new multi-level marketing business.


Does This Sound Familiar?

After being harangued for an hour or so about how you can make a fortune--with overly enthusiastic people delivering emotional testimonials about how much money they were supposedly making and a bunch of group cheers where everyone had to get up and yell, "Whoopee!"--the meeting broke up into smaller groups, where your friends and a bunch of other people tried to sign you up.

Maybe you did sign--and, as a result, ended up with $4,000 worth of water filters sitting in your garage. Or several hundred boxes of some superdeluxe nutritional products that supposedly allow you to eat cheeseburgers and watch TV and still lose weight. Or a special water ball that goes in your washing machine and does your laundry for a hundred years. Or amazing knives that cut through telephone books.


It's not surprising that your memories of the experience aren't fond ones.


This practice of pressuring people into buying a "distributorship" and, along with it, a ton of stuff they don't need and will never be able to sell is known as "front-loading"--and it's illegal, as is most of what the authorities call "pyramid schemes."
The good news is that pyramid schemes are NOT what this is about. So please keep reading.