Perfectly Posh Review
Company Name: Perfectly Posh
Costs: $94
Rating: 36/100
Update 2017: Since I’ve been inundated with fanatic Posh sellers on my initial review, I’ve changed the name of the article to reflect more precisely what it’s about. This is a review of the income opportunity, as compared to other similar income opportunities and “work at home businesses” that I’ve done myself, or reviewed in the past. It’s my opinion that selling soaps through network marketing is not very lucrative for most people, so Posh is not the best way to go if you want to create a sustainable business.

Are You Ready To Work Your Ass Off to Earn Your Lifestyle?
Are you tired of the daily grind? With a laptop and an internet connection I built a small website to generate income, and my life completely changed. Let me show you exactly how I’ve been doing it for more than 13 years.
Details why are in the “product breakdown” and “opportunity breakdown” section.
If you like their soaps, great. Keep buying them. If you make some cash on the side, great. Enjoy your hobby. I have no issues with that.
My main issue is Posh being pitched as a great way to make supplemental INCOME. A few hundred bucks on the side is not an income in my opinion. My website is about starting an online business you can rely on for years, not some chump change while you chat with friends over the weekend.
What Is Perfectly Posh?
Another MLM targeted at women, which sells pamper and luxury products.
Short Review
To be honest, there isn’t a lot about Perfectly Posh that makes it stand out. Sure, the products look kind of cool, but there isn’t a shortage of soaps and body butter products already on the market. At the same time, the commission scheme for the company is pretty typical and certainly puts distributors at a disadvantage.
Product Breakdown
Perfectly Posh is a bit of an odd name for the company, especially as the product selection doesn’t really have much to do with the concept of posh. Instead, the company is promoting products focused on the idea of pampering. The selection of products includes things like hand cream, foot products, skin cream, bath bars, face wash, and much more.
The products themselves are fairly unique, largely because you wouldn’t find those specific flavors and descriptions from other companies. For example:
At the same time, the products are a bit on the expensive side ($9 for a bar of soap?). In many cases, people would be prepared to pay higher prices, simply because most people assume that pampering is going to be expensive. Likewise, people often think that a higher price means better quality even if that often isn’t the case.
However, the higher-than-normal product prices are still a bit of an issue, as they decrease how many people you could sell to. After all, spending $9 on one block of soap is really a bit extravagant, even for a treat.
I haven’t seen a lot of talk about the quality of the products, which isn’t that surprising. Realistically, there is a huge number of different companies that sell similar products and for the most part, they are all pretty similar. I mean come on, you can get handmade, high-quality soaps on Etsy in any scent you can think of.
EDIT: Check the comment section! It seems that PP has created such a rabid fanbase of soap enthusiasts that they can’t handle any bit of criticism of the company. OK, fine. If you like the soaps, pay $9 for them. None of my business. But the fact remains that you can find similar soaps for the same price for cheaper at other companies. The fact that so many insane people have berated me in the comment section for even suggesting that their soaps are not 100% amazing is pretty disheartening.
There are some product reviews on Amazon for many of the items, but they aren’t especially helpful. For example, many products just have one or two reviews and those reviews seem to be pretty biased. The soap below is one example of this, as both reviewers were people saying you should buy from a distributor.
In other words, there’s nothing really special about these products. There are good reviews and bad reviews. If you like them and want to sell them, that’s great. But it’s all a matter of opinion, just like any other product out there. Your job as a marketer and salesperson will be to get people to change brands or try a new brand. Are you ready to make a convincing argument of why someone should buy a $9 bar of soap?
Can you really spin it so that Perfectly Posh products sound better than anything else out there?
Chunk Soap Review (Finally)
Well, 99% of the comments in this post say, “You didn’t try it, so you cant’ say anything about the company.”. Though I disagree, I acquired a bar of “chunk”. It was a $5 version, not a $9 version. My review? Yeah, it was a good soap. For $5, I would even say it was a great soap! Smelled great, look like you could eat it, and for five bucks I can’t complain.
- Would I pick up this soap over any other soap in the grocery store? Probably not. It’s just a bar of soap.
- Does it last longer than another type of soap out there? Nope. Probably will last a few weeks, just like anything else.
- If I had a friend selling this would I seek them out to buy a $5 item? Nope. I’d probably just buy from Amazon or switch to another brand. Convenience is important to me.
- Does this make me want to sell it to friends and start a soap/lotion selling business? Not at all. Just not something I’m interested in.
I see the appeal of selling “day spa” related items, and the community aspect women enjoy in MLM. I can see how some people would enjoy recommending products to their friends that they like! However, limiting yourself to a single brand makes you a salesperson, not an honest, objective friend recommending products. Keep that in mind!
OK, now I tried it. Now I can have an opinion on it.
Opportunity Breakdown
More Updates 2017: . A lot of gals ripped into me in the comments for saying that women are targeted by MLMs. Here’s an interesting article (from a woman) called How Multi-Level Marketing Targets and Destroys Female Entrepreneurs
The opportunity side of Perfectly Posh is pretty much what I’d expect. You start off by buying a starter kit, which offers a range of products along with business tools. In this case, the kit costs $94 plus shipping and tax – so you’re spending quite a bit just to get going.
Distributors for the company earn 20% commission for sales on the first tier and 25% once they move up to the next rank in the company. That’s not too bad! In fact, 25% commission is good compared to many programs I’ve reviewed. The trouble is that you are selling small-ticket items, so 25% of a $10 item is just $2.50. You need to sell a lot of items. Do you know that many people personally? Probably not. That’s why it’s almost impossible to make money with MLMs unless you have a website.
As a general rule, the amount of money you make actually selling the products tends to be pretty low since you’re selling IRL. Even a large 20% commission on a $10 item is only $2 per sale. Instead, most income will come from bonuses and your downline. Now, a downline refers to the people you recruit, the people they recruit, and so on. This is the core part of this type of business, which is also known as a multi-level marketing business (or MLM).
Essentially, the idea is to increase your downline as much as possible and to also increase the amount of sales the people in your downline make. Doing so helps you increase in rank in the company and also helps to increase your income, like so:
This model is what makes earning money so difficult. Realistically, you need to recruit a decent number of people into the company and have them also be effective at recruiting. Doing that is exceptionally hard.
How many people do you personally know that would be willing to invest the time and money needed to be successful in the business? Probably not many. But, you would need to find people like that to get anywhere in the company. Likewise, those people would have to find others and so on.
Honestly, there aren’t even that many people out there that have an interest in this type of company and have the resources to be successful. Often, this means that distributors might be able to recruit one or two others, but are never able to build a successful downline. The end result is that they never earn much money.
MLMs, Women, and Success
Perfectly Posh is yet another MLM company that targets women. This pattern is incredibly common across many different MLMs and is extremely manipulative. One reason for this seems to be that many women end up staying at home and raising their families. As they do this, women often end up looking for ways to make a little money on the side and MLMs exploit this concept.

This type of company makes it sound like you can have the best of everything. They suggest that women can earn money without having to give up their time with their families. At the same time, they are even presented as ways to be more social, because you are interacting with friends and potential customers.
But, all of this is manipulation, plain and simple. Your chances of making any money with an MLM are small and your chances of making a decent amount of money are tiny. In fact, you’ll end up spending a lot of time away from home building your business since you have to meet people face to face to recruit them and sell. Are you going to drag the kids along to your meeting with a client for while you pitch the products? Are you going to take your kids to their home and have them run around while your friend examines the products? These are things you’ve got to consider!
Realistically, MLMs take advantage of people’s business inexperience. Failure is built into the system. If everyone could recruit successfully and build a downline, then everyone in the world would be a Perfectly Posh consultant. If you want a good idea of the challenge of MLMs, take a look at this quote from an MLM report by the Consumer Awareness Institute:
To make matters even worse, a lot of people actually lose money in an MLM.
After all, you have to buy a certain amount of product to stay active and most companies push members to buy much more than they would otherwise. For example, distributors are often encouraged to buy a large selection of products so they can show those products off to potential customers.
As you can probably imagine, that approach can get expensive quickly.
I’ve personally seen a number of people fall into the trap of MLMs. Often they did make some money from sales, but they ended up spending much more than that on products. They would justify that approach by saying that they wanted the products. However, they wouldn’t have actually spent that money otherwise.
In many cases, people mightn’t pay that much attention to how much money they spend but will get excited about any money they earn. So, it can take quite some time before distributors realize that they aren’t actually getting anywhere. At the same time, those distributors will be recruiting friends and family into the company and convincing them that it is a great opportunity for earning money.
That pattern is one of the reasons I get so concerned about MLMs. Not only are they ineffective as an income approach, but they often suck in people who really can’t afford to get involved.
Other Comments
Earning income from any MLM is always harder than it sounds. You might know some people interested in buying products from the company, but that doesn’t mean those people are going to help you run your business. A few sales, in the beginning, is great, but is it a sustainable business model?
Besides that, most people end up trying to sell products to friends and family, while also trying to recruit them. That approach can often lose you friends, which is just one more reason not to even get started.
MLM VS Affiliate Marketing Online
As I mentioned earlier, the MLM model is difficult. It is possible to make money (and some people do), but most people don’t. In fact, most people end up losing money buying the products for themselves. That makes you a customer, not a distributor!
The thing is that you CAN work for yourself by selling products you love. By building a simple website and promoting products you’ve tried or want to buy yourself, you can make money online. It means you don’t have to recruit friends and family, you don’t have to post on Facebook, and you don’t have to stick with one brand. If you think home spa treatments are fun and that’s what you’d like to build a business about, go for it! Make a website and reach millions of people online instead of just your close network of friends.
You can learn how to make a simple website through online training, including free resources here on my website.
I made a website about computer software a couple of years ago and now it allows me to work full time from home. I love writing articles for it and talking to other people enthusiastic about the software, and I don’t even have to sell it to anyone in my family or try to get them to join a “club”.
What do you think? Would you build a website for women looking to pamper themselves, or would you pick a different topic? Do you think selling soaps is an exciting business venture or just another run-of-the-mill biz op? Let us know in the comments! Oh yeah, and what do you think of all the rude people in the comments? Do you think they are helping Perfectly Posh by telling me I’m an idiot or are they dissuading potential sellers from getting involved?
Can You Generate Reliable Income With Perfectly Posh?
The Perfectly Posh Review
Products
Business Opportunity
Final
This is not a "bad" company or scam. I just don't believe the products are good enough to get excited about, and I don't think the multi-layer compensation plan will help anyone profit significantly here.
Update Friday, July 1: I see there are a lot of upset ladies about my review. This is just not a company that I would recommend to a friend or for someone starting an online business. Just my opinion based on my experience selling things online.

MLM Critic & Author: Nathaniell
What's up ladies and dudes! Great to finally meet you, and I hope you enjoyed this post. I have to be honest though. I'm not a big fan of MLM. Tried it. Hated it.
Affiliate marketing is cheaper, faster, and easier. See for yourself and join millions of other successful affiliates generating income from their blogs!
No inventory. No fees. No recruiting. 3 BILLION potential buyers online.
Robin
Clearly, the author hasn’t truly done any real due diligence before blogging on this company. If he had, he would know that it’s actually pretty easy to sell Posh because the products sell themselves.
Sidebar… those $9 triple milled, SLS free soaps last 2-3 months with daily use – just sayin’.
Personally, I didn’t even want to do this as a business.. In fact and as ALL of my friends and family can attest… I was adamantly opposed to it. I only got into it for the kit and the discount (because the products are amazing and I fell in love with them). Interestingly enough, the minute I started sharing Posh with others… things kind of took off. And a little more than 1 year, 200+ teamies, 6 promotions and a trip to Italy later.. here I am at Silver Premier with only two rank advancements left to make it to the top of the company. My day job is actually now optional. Not too shabby for someone who only wanted the kit and the discount. But enough about me… Here are some fun facts about the poshportunity that the author doesn’t share:
-the kit is $99 and it includes almost $200 in full sized products that can be for personal use, shared with others or sold. It includes samples and other business supplies if you want to work it as a business.
-there are no monthly autoships or monthly minimum sales requirements. If you sell – great – if you don’t… the worst that will happen is that you will go inactive ($300 in 6 months required to stay active).
-there are no monthly website fees or any other monthly consultant fees. The only fee we have is $7.95 per year for our prepaid MasterCards which they load our weekly commissions and monthly bonuses onto.
-the company has less than 100K consultants – meaning we are nowhere near market saturation.
-Posh has done over $100 million in sales. Only .04% of business have ever hit that mark. That right there is pretty telling in and of itself.
-Silver Premiers and above are eligible for a monthly pool bonus on top of commissions and all other bonuses (I actually hit it in February when I promoted to Silver). Pools can be anywhere from several hundred to several thousand dollars.
-All consultants are eligible to earn a $500-$2000 annual cash bonus AND Posh Points when they earn the Annual Award for sales and recruiting. I earned it in 2016 and I already earned it for 2017. Oh.. and I’ve also been able to purchase an iPad Pro completely with Posh points, as well as several other items like Kate Spade and Coach bags.
-Last year’s incentive program included trips to St. Thomas and Italy! Last June myself and 49 other lucky people earned the all expense paid trip to Italy! Recently, 60 consultants went to Costa Rica and right now ANYONE who joins can earn an all expense paid trip to Greece! And since everyone starts at $0 for incentives… it levels the playing field. I didn’t even know I was in the running for Italy until the month before the incentive ended!
In closing, I will say that I find it interesting that the author has his own business in affiliate marketing and that if you click on his links he will show you how to make some real money. Bravo for going after your dreams bro. I mean that.. sincerely. It’s just too bad that you feel the need to degrade and/or demonize other companies in order to try and gain business.
Nathaniell
I don’t believe this post was degrading or demoralizing another company. Just my opinion that 1) Most people should stay away from MLM and 2) You can make more money online that selling soaps to your buddies. That seems to be too much to handle for the PP crowd. I guess you have to be 100% on board or you’re a “hater”.
I know sooooo many people involved that have gone to these MLM “parties” and they all say the same. “I don’t really want to go but it’s my friend. I don’t want to spend money on this junk, but it’s my friend. I’ll just buy something cheap to support her but I’m definitely not going to the next one”.
True story.
Edit: I just approved this comment from another MLM company (the products didn’t work) “….you are more likely to ask for and get a refund from Amazon that an MLM that your friend is going to move on from in 6 months. I swear, she has been involved in so many MLMs I absolutely will not buy anything from her ever! Thank you for your article, I was beginning to wonder if I was just too cynical!”
Robin
LOL.. I never said you were a “hater”… in fact I didn’t attack or bash you at all. I simply responded to your blog post sharing my experience… and facts about the company that seemed to be missing from your review. Actually.. I TOTALLY 100% agree that most direct sales companies and their practices lack integrity and transparency. That’s exactly why it took being invited to several Posh parties before finally breaking down and making a “guilt purchase”… and why I was not interested in the business at all. It wasn’t until I actually purchased and tried Posh that I realized how amazing the products are (I’ve always had hormonal acne which went away within weeks of using it regularly). And I soon realized that I didn’t have to be shady or scammy in sharing the Posh love in order to be successful. In fact… company-wide trainings on being successful in the business encourages consultants to NOT be shady or scammy… but to just be themselves and let the products do the heavy lifting as far as the sales. In reference to your edit about another comment for a different MLM… I know that happens.. and it’s a shame. But Posh has a 30 day guarantee.. and they honor it.
Jenn
I have to agree with Robin. If your goal was to blog about your opinion regarding the key differences between MLM companies vs affiliate marketing, and your reasoning on why you believe people should aim more towards affiliate marketing in order to achieve their income goals, then you would’ve clearly stated that. Instead, you spent a majority of this particular blog targeting a newer MLM company, Perfectly Posh specifically, as opposed to speaking about MLM companies in general. You mentioned that PP targets women, which you claim is manipulative. While this may be true, so does Younique, Mary Kay, Avon, Pure Romance, Scentsy, Pure Romance, and the other laundry list of MLM companies out there floating around right now. Why are you specifically targeting PP? That’s the part of this that has me and many other commenters caught off guard. Because believe it or not, you could’ve chosen ANY other MLM company and come up with the exact same results with a comparison in regards to MLM companies vs affiliate marketing.
I actually ran across your blog while I was googling something completely unrelated and it just caught my eye due to your “Edit: Check the Comment Section! PP has created such a rabid fanbase that….” , so I began reading. I have no horse in this race, so I found your blog interesting. I never truly understood how MLM companies worked and you’ve given me some insight into that. However, it was a little off-putting that you are speaking so poorly on how the PP business operated and then pitched your own agenda at the end. I had never even heard of PP until this blog, but after more Googling (old trusty Google always shows the way) and now I’m intrigued. From what I’ve found, there are MANY PP consultants that host their OWN websites separate from the replicated site I guess that PP gives them for free when they sign up. Correct me if I’m wrong, but is that not affiliate marketing? They have a website set up to market the public, NOT their friends and family, as you so delicately put it in your blog.
I was with you until I reached the comment section. I find it funny how anyone that disagrees with your opinion, that you posted in a PUBLIC forum with a COMMENT section to get responses and feedback, is automatically a “butthurt PP consultant”. You wrote in your blog that “PP has such a rabid fan base that they cannot handle criticism.” What’s hilarious about that particular statement is the fact that it appears to come from a guilty conscious on your part. Any respectable blogger that writes a negative opinionated blog with an open comment section should expect feedback and be able to handle that feedback with CLASS!! Instead, all I’ve read were crass replies from you downgrading and demoralizing people you “assume” are PP consultants. Also, regarding your statement, “See all the rude comments below…” Honestly, the ONLY rude comments I see in this section are from YOU. That’s a surefire way to get these people to trust you and follow your “free, 20-lesson plan strategy to creating their own websites”… LOL. If you would stop being so negative about these particular consultants for a minute, you might actually gain some business.
Nathaniell
1. There’s a difference between responding politely, as you have done, and some of the other nasty comments I’ve gotten. That’s fine, people can have their opinions, but many of the comments are horrendous. I delete the profane ones.
2. Yes, I pitch an ALTERNATIVE way to make money online. People are free to choose. Yes I make commissions from sales. Would you feel differently if I just had ads on my site? That’s people selling stuff too, through an ad exchange. So you think I shouldn’t have ads on my site either? So the internet should be 100% free and no one make money from creating content?
Plus, I feel like people will have more success in general building their own business rather than relying on an MLM company. That’s my opinion, and I want to help people have success that way.
3. If you want to sell PP, that’s fine. If you like the products great. Go for it. I just wouldn’t recommend it to my friends or family, so I can’t recommend it to my readers.
Kalie
As someone who does NOT sell perfectly posh, I feel this review is completely wrong. I was skeptical before buying, because seeing that $9 price tag for a bar of soap does seem a bit over the top. I decided to try it anyway. That $9 bar of soap, (Chunk Bar) has lasted my family of four 3 months so far. Being used daily. This isn’t an MLM scheme that lies to get you to buy, only for you to end up disappointed. I have since purchased scrubs, body butters, face masks, snarky bars etc. Basically everything. As a customer, I stand by these products. I have a skin condition called Keratosis Polaris, (chicken skin) and pperfectly posh body butters are the first products I have used that actually help with flare ups. My skin has never been so healthy since starting the use of these products. I recommend trying something before you make a bias review. How can you truly review something you have never tried?
julianna
the product is not the issue..it’s the “business” model. If you have to recruit people who will also be selling to the same people that you were selling to… at some point the only people you have to worry about selling to is your downline…. so these people will continue to put in the work and their upline will get paid off the work they are doing. No matter how hard you work, you will always be below the person who initiated you. Its just a scummy way of making money…”friends and family use your hard earned cash you made while at a real job and buy these products from me so that i can make money off of you to pay my bills. And if you buy enough of my products ill get to go to Italy!!” How about I don’t buy your products, save the money i actually worked for, and take MYSELF OR MY FAMILY to Italy! its honestly not a real job. you put nothing into society by selling other peoples products. and NO it does not make you a business owner or an entrepreneur. You want to sell posh products because you like them? fine. sell the products. but don’t recruit others to make money off of them… Posh is a side thing when your desperate enough for money you’ll use your friends and family instead of asking them for money outright. But if you pursue this as a career, you’re either incredibly naive or just as scummy as the company you “work” for.
Does not matter
I am a posh consultant. Let me say this.
I do not regret joining. Many people are actually pretty successful.
Now here is the issue. Posh has a system set up to always let the consultant lose a majority of the money in order to gain more customers. This program? It’s called perks.
Now perks is a system in which you can earn 6-10% back on purchases, awesome in theory pretty shitty in practice. Stay with me.
Perks can be applied to any product and perks can also be split among several different products.
Consultants do NOT get ANY commission on items a customer uses perks on so… If your customer adds 80 cents worth of perks to a 25 item YOU as a consultant get ZERO dollars in commission. Thats right,your customer just unknowingly cost you about $6 to save themselves 80 cents.
What’s worse? If a customer decides to split perks throughout the entire order. Say they decide to take a dollar off every item in their cart. Well now you get…That’s right, zero dollars in commission.
Now of course it’s always best to remind your customer that items they use perks on don’t accumulate perks so it’s always best for them* and for you* if they apply all the perks to the lower priced items AND to save SMALL amounts of perks for later vs. Saving a dollar on a 25 dollar item and not receiving the 6-10 % perks on that particular item…
Also consultants get taxed on perks even tho we receive our refunds on damaged items in, you guessed it PERKS and although posh says they dont tax those particular perks the numbers say otherwise.
Another issue is the products. Prices go up a ton and products change so much its impossible to properly market everything because you’ll never be able to keep up, unless you funnel every cent you make into restocking which kind of make it all pointless.
If a customer with cystic acne finds a cleanser they love and posh decides to take it away then you the consultant has to explain it and offer another product that may or may not work when in actuality that product will probably be discontinued within a year as well.
I like posh and I do love many of the products but the company is seriously not great and the consultants always make excuses for corporate stupidity and the ceo is a- insert mean word here-who spends more time taking photo ops than she does actually addressing many issues that go on within the company that directly affect the consultants.
This year they sent out incorrect 1099 forms and messed up a ton of consultants taxes by doing so and her apology consisted of telling us to look at the bright side because the new 2017 catalog was coming out.
If you want to join a almost 6 year old company that always uses the excuse thats its growing to cover up its mistakes, join posh.
If you want to get attacked by catty women everytime you ask a legitimate question concerning how the business is being ran, join posh.
If you want to join a company that expect you to fork out hundreds of dollars in making and mailing strangers free products, join posh.
If you’re okay with cold messaging people and the moto ” No doesn’t mean no, no means not right now” join posh.
Anddd if you want to join a company that refuses to punish consultant scammers but will punish someone who call them out on their mistakes. Join posh.
So. Go ahead and attack this blogger for not trying the products first. I have tried and loved the products but the company as a whole, has a long way to go before its worth joining.
You’ll make money but you’ll also be apart of a company that will always put their bottom dollar above the happiness of it’s consultants. You’re better than that. I am too and that’s why I’m leaving.
Nathaniell
I love your honest opinions! My favorite lines are these:
Jill
I’ve never seen a more accurate comment. I could have written your entire post verbatim.
Deb
Since you are leaving, I’d like an honest opinion. Would it be benificial to sign up just to get the kit and buy for yourself?
Jenn
This was awesome!!! And I learned something new. I did NOT realize that consultants lost commission when customers applied Perks to items in their carts. No wonder Posh is pushing consultants to advertise their Perks Rewards Program relentlessly. Thank you for this.
Grace Lane
I do not sell Posh but will probably end up joining. Not because I want to make money But just to share the product and support my addiction to the products. Of you haven’t tried them on not sure how you can have such a strong opinion. I do agree this is not a get rich company unless you have a huge circle of friends, family and have the time to get out to sell it. I have purchased many products. There is only a few I didn’t like. I loved so many of them and they actually do work and have been so much better for my skin than anything else I’ve tried. And $9 for a bar of soap is reasonable because it’s not a regular size bar, it’s 2-3 times the size of a regular bar and it will last you 3-5 months. $9 stretched for that long isn’t a lot of money at all. I could go on and on about the products I love from posh. But this is a business that I see as a good one to join if you want to just share your love for the products and help support the purchases for yourself by using the small commision but mostly the perk points you receive from buying and others buying through you.
Nicole
I just joined for the exact reasons you’re thinking about joining . . . the items in the kit and the discount! I have a few favorite items that I’ve loved for years and that is pretty much all I knew about Posh. I thankfully joined under a leader that is super involved and I’m learning why our products are great, what some of those sticks are helpful for (The Healer Stick, Sleepy Time Stick, etc.), etc. Plus you have so many opportunities (especially when you first join) to earn perks and in turn get free products or business tools (oh and 50% off your first order of tools within their portal)! Your website is always free (and seriously, I’ve had to pay a monthly fee for a website with a company I used to represent) . . . I don’t know . . . I have a good feeling about this company. The products are easy to sample out and share (super easy to start a conversation about and just hand someone samples to try/review). Plus you don’t have to worry about your sales the first period that you join in, so I just have to sell $300 by December 31, 2017 to stay active. That will definitely not be a problem! Let me know if you have any questions!!!
Nathaniell
(((Sales Pitch)))
Jenn
Just FYI..you do not get a discount as a Posh consultant. As a consultant, you pay the same prices as customers. And you can apply Perks just like a customer to your cart. I just wanted to make you aware before you joined, because I would hate for you to join a company under the false impression of receiving a discount on products you “love”.
Real Talk
I think this was a pretty honest and well written review. I’ve played the MLM game before and consultants are mlm companies number one customers. They are told they are the heart and soul of the company and that’s true because they are the ones purchasing the majority of the product. I think it’s a far better idea to be an affiliate to get the product you love for you’re time and effort. That’s the best advice I’ve ever read on a review about any mlm company, kudos!