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Is Mark Victor Hansen
a Scammer?
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If
you really could become a millionaire in one minute,
wouldn’t everybody be doing it? Of course they would. But
for some reason Mark Victor Hansen, of Chicken Soup for
the Soul, and real estate writer Robert Allen, of Nothing
Down want us to believe their book, One Minute
Millionaire can make us all Donald Trumps
instantly.
The pair claim in the book
their plan forlife is to create on million new
millionaires to share the world’s wealth with. That’s a nice
goal, but is it really plausible? They say by reading and
following the steps in their book it is.
The book does seem filed with a number of step-by-step
instructions on how to make a lot of money. There are various
avenues to make the money through, and a lot of work to get it,
but it could possibly produce some millionaires.
But there should be a little caution taken with the advice
in the book. You have to consider the source. You see, in
recent years Robert Allen has been the subject of quite a few
warnings in the business community.
Robert Allen has been in real estate for some time, but he
has also gone through a series of bankruptcies in his real
estate dealings. That doesn’t seem like a path to being a
millionaire. Allen was also a big player in the multi-level
marketing scam USANA.
A number of people who signed up for USANA filed complaints
saying they gave much of their savings to the company and got
little to nothing in return. They were promised assistance
starting a business, goal planning and a guarantee that if
their business did not take off, USANA would give them a refund
of all the money they had put in to begin their business.
Many of the victims were already in debt and were promised a
way to get out of debt and overcome their financial woes,
becoming once again financially independent if they would just
come up with the starting cash. But report after report says
that while they were pushed into handing over their cash
through high-pressure sales pitches, once the business started
failing they could not get any assistance from USANA.
They would continue trying to keep the business afloat,
spending money on promotions, marketing and ads, but in the
end, it wouldn’t happen and they lost their savings, still
getting none of the promised help from USANA. In addition some
found out, after the fact that they services they were being
forced to pay for, could have been found for free on the
Internet.
The lesson to learn from this, and possibly the moral of
this story, is that as soon as someone asks for money to start
a business, you should end the conversation with them
immediately. No good businessperson will tell you that you
should take your life savings and risk it on a possibility that
you cannot assure will support you in the long run. That is
what you have to remember, and then run from the scams that are
trying to tell you that you should hand all your money over to
them.
I work online with a method where you can make several
hundred dollars for a couple hours of work, whenever you have
time.
If you want you can join
my insider team where we share the businesses that
are really working. Along with tips on how we use
them. It is free to join, just let me know where to
send the info...
Click Here
so I can send you my Insider Sign
Up.
Good
Luck,
Sarah
Newman
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