Direct sales may rake in
$517m of business this year
Up to 400,000 people in multi-level
marketing; boom follows end of controls to set it apart from pyramid
selling
By Lorna Tan
SELLING products from home - in which your neighbor, friend or
relative might try to sell you skin-care products, for example -
sounds small-time but is rapidly becoming big business in Singapore.
Sales from multi-level marketing (MLM) soared 64 per cent last
year to US$192 million (S$331 million) as more hopped onto the
networking bandwagon, figures released yesterday show.
The sales were generated by 255,000 full and part-time
distributors.
And this year, sales are expected to have jumped to US$300
million (S$517.2 million), while the number of distributors could
reach 400,000, said the chairman of the Direct Selling Association
of Singapore (DSAS), Mr Benjamin Tan.
He attributes the expansion to a growing awareness of the income
opportunities presented by MLM, as more people become aware that it
is no longer illegal.
'The reasons include the liberalisation of the law... People are
more acquainted with the opportunities and legitimacy of multi-level
marketing.'
Restrictions on MLM were lifted from June 2000 when the
Multi-level Marketing and Pyramid Selling (Prohibition) Act of 1973
was amended. The change also set MLM apart from pyramid selling,
which is still banned.
The key difference is that in pyramid selling, commissions are
derived largely through recruitment, and not from product sales to
consumers, which is the case in MLM.
MLM salesmen, depending on their level, are able to earn
commissions ranging from 1 to 20 per cent. They also get a cut for
sales down the line, up to a certain tier.
Advocates of MLM say that it is a low-risk way of starting your
own business and it can also provide a second source of income.
As the typical initial capital outlay amounts to only $65 to
purchase products such as for Nu Skin beauty care, workers can start
as part-timers.
According to the president and chief executive of the United
States Direct Selling Association, Mr Neil Offen, the MLM industry
generated a turnover of more than US$86 billion worldwide last year
and there are currently some 47 million sales people globally.
'About 450,000 sales people are joining direct selling companies
in 170 countries every week,' said Mr Offen, who was in Singapore
yesterday for a one-day visit.
He is bullish about the growth of MLM in Asia, particularly when
China lifts its ban on MLM, which is expected to take place by
December next year.
This represents an opportunity to Chinese-speaking MLM sales
people in Singapore who can expand their reach into China to recruit
members, he adds.
Asia alone accounts for more than 40 per cent of the industry's
global sales.
Last year, US was the top market, raking in US$28 billion. Japan
was next with US$24.5 billion.
However, the MLM experience has its downside as well as its
pluses.
An ex-MLM sales person, who declined to be named, lamented that
he gave up after nine months as he was unable to grow his
'downlines', or teams of new members. Another problem is that some
MLM distributors end up buying the products for their own
consumption just to meet pre-set sales quotas.
DSAS has 18 member firms and they include global skin care
company Nu Skin Enterprise and online e-learning firm SkyQuestCom.
Both have 20,000 distributors each in Singapore.