Looking At MonAvie Scams Versus Opportunities
About six years ago, Monarch Health Sciences introduced a new healthy juice drink called MonAvie and it is sold and distributed through multi-level marketing. MonAvie juice has been showing up on the evening television newscast as the new wonder juice that treats everything from your aching feet to high cholesterol. Are the juice and the sales opportunities all they’re stacked up to be or is it all MonAvie scams?
MonAvie juice products feature the acai (ah-sah-ee) berry as the first ingredient. For several years, the berry has gotten a lot of attention for its high antioxidant levels and perceived general health benefits. Antioxidants fight off cell damage and help fight disease.
You can find antioxidants in a lot of foods, mainly fresh fruits and vegetables. The one familiar to most of us is Vitamin C, often listed on ingredient labels as ascorbic acid. MonAvie claims that its proprietary blend of 19 fruits will provide energy, joint support, and all around health if you drink the prescribed 4 ounces each day. The juice comes in a 28 oz. Wine bottle, so it will last you about a week. It sounds okay until you learn that it will cost you as much as a bottle of good champagne, so multiply that by four weeks a month.
A national men’s magazine decided to put MonAvie to the test. They put it up against a number of other available juice drinks to see how it stacked up. Turned out that it didn’t do so well when compared to good old grape and orange juice. Those over the counter juices had much higher levels of Vitamin C and phenolic acids (another antioxidant) than the MonAvie product. While it’s certain that all those fruit juices in MonAmie are healthy and won’t harm you, when weighed against the cost, there are certainly much less expensive ways to get your daily nutrition.
To make money with this system, you must recruit others to sell the product and then they need to recruit others. This usually starts out by harassing your friends and family to help you get started. Before you do that, you might ask yourself if they can afford it. You will not make money unless the people you recruit continue to sell, or buy the product. The multi-level marketing system works well for the top sellers, but not always so well for the average person, which is where most of us fall.
To make a decent income selling MonAvie, you better be willing to work harder than you’ve ever worked in your life and hustle everyone you meet, because that’s how multi-level marketing works. Despite what they advertise, you can’t make money in your sleep and people are not going to be banging down your door to get this wonderful elixir. You have to be willing to get out there every day and find new ways to sell your product and convince others that they need to sell it too.
You have to be a true entrepreneur, high energy, I can sell anything type of person. If you aren’t, then invest your money somewhere else and keep the good will of your family and friends. If what you want is better health, then eat more fresh foods and take a multi-vitamin each day.
In deciding whether we’re looking at MonAvie scams, it’s a matter of opinion, as most things are. For the majority of people it’s something they can easily do without and simply can afford. So, if you’re considering this as your next moneymaker, you should seriously think about the income level of those you intend to pitch to.
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