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In Reply to: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: I love Primerica posted by Desmond Carr on September 22, 2004 at 09:11:05:
: : Why am I worried about the people that have gone through the PFS system? For starters, most were promised pie in the sky 6 figure incomes, which are rarely attainable in ANY MLM company. Most were lied to about the ownership aspects of PFS. Most that quit, paid their $199 & then left, unlicensed & $199 poorer! That's why!
: : The fact is, you did not need to join PFS to get licensed and there definitly are better ways to learn about life insurance. The only thing you'll learn at PFS is what they want you to learn, which is term is best ALL the time in EVERY situation! This is not possible! Would you go to a doctor that prescribed the SAME medication for EVERY diagnosis? I don't think so.
: : Correction, 150,000 people or 20 million quiting only makes an MLM company better, and then only for those at the top. These type of companies do NOT care about the people they recruit, they only care about the names they can get from the people they recruit. A favorite saying in PFS is "It's not who YOU know, it's who THEY know." Or, as Hector Lemarque always says, "The key is to keep them coming & going." I agree that all companies have turnover, but none save MLM's have a theory to keep them coming & going, their goal is to hire & keep quality people!
: : Here's another correction for ya! I'm not "flat broke & living on social security", in fact, I most likly make more in a month than most PFSers do in 2 years. Oh, BTW, unlike you, I was one of the few who made $100,000 in their career at PFS. The fact is, most PFSers could make more money going back to their old jobs flipping burgers than they can at PFS.
: : You are the "A NEGATIVE, DULL, DISOLUSIONED (sic), FRUSTRATED DAD GUM CRYBABY"
: : This is one of the things I never could figure out with PFS. A man (AL Williams) is the most investigated man EVER in the insurance industry & is drummed out of the industry due to his unethical, deceptive & misleading practices & you guys treat him like a god!
: : Seems kind of backwards to me.
: : Now, instead of the typical PFS spew, why don't you dispute what I have posted with cold, hard facts & where to find them. You know, kind of like I did.
: : Get a life!
: :
: : : I thought that your conversations about PFS are really dumb. I am a PFS representative and I am not one of the people making over 100,000 dollars a year. In fact I have not probably made 100,000 dollars in my whole career with PFS since I got licensed manny years ago.
: : : Why are you so worried about 150,000 people that have gone through the PFS system. Even if they did make $100,000 a year they are not going to give you any of it. The fact remains that there are people out there like me that joined PFS just to get an insurance license. I have not been in it for the money. I got in PFS to learn about life insurance and how it worked.
: : : You seem to be missing the point that in all companies there is turnover of employees. With a fast food place they know that most employees will leave within the first year. Big Deal. what difference does it make if 150,000 people or 20 million people quit. That dosent make the system bad in fact it actually makes the systen better. Everyone has the same chances in life but most people like you end up flat broke living on social security. The people that have fell through the system have probably done so by their own choice just like I have chosen not
: : : to work with PFS all these years. As far as answering the rest of your stupid questions and comments, well it's pretty obvious to me that you are as the coach always said.
: : : A NEGATIVE, DULL, DISOLUSIONED, FRUSTRATED DAD GUM CRYBABY. I sure as hell don't want to follow someone like you. Hell you would probably try to sell me some trash value life insurance. No thanks been there, done that.
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: I'm sorry for your passionate and hard feelings for Primerica. I'm not here to dispute or argue, but to simply give my world as I see it. When I first saw the company I was headed into my senior year of college. I had spent the previous year sending out dozens of resumes looking for something. I played the game as taught in college. I got good grades (3.3 avg.), I worked very hard, I obtained leadership in many clubs/organizations, I served my community (and still do), and I tried to gain as much life experience that can be had on a campus. A couple of months from facing the real world and no company or person cared (that's fine). I didn't receive offers, interviews, nothing from my efforts of a career search. This is what I did notice: the students who knew the right people or had the right connections were given a chance. Thousands of folks enter college every year. Many of these have and hopes of becoming a CEO or being the top person in their field. By the end of their 4-6 years the vast majority are stunned by the jab of reality. Some may still try and strive but very few will ever achieve. Many dream of a different life as a child, but as they live their dreams shrink to settle. Does this mean that life and the all of our hopes and dreams don't work, because not everyone makes it. Because their is a high turnover of big dreamers. I pray that I never ever stop dreaming, and that's priceless let alone $199. I still owe $20,000 in college debt.
Obviously you haven't read the ABC's of Making Money or the recent Success From Home Magazine on the shelves right now