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Network Marketing Training CD - The Network Marketing Success System that Never Fails by Dale Calvert THE MLM PROFIT


The Network Marketing Success System that never Fails



from Dale Calvert aka The MLM Profit is a candid, no fluff, insightful look into the network marketing industry and what it takes for you to develop long-term, ongoing, residual income. After making millions of dollars and building an organization of over 60,000 distributors and retiring in 1990 Dale has been the go to guy for companies and top leaders in the network marketing industry who want to take their organizations to the next level.



Dale has helped leaders from virtually every network marketing company around the world g et a clear vision of what it really takes to develop a large, duplicating, organization of leaders. If you are afraid of hearing the truth instead of the normal blah, blah, fluff this CD is not for you. If you are looking for inspiration and insights that you simply will not find from anyone else at any cost then add “The Network Marketing Success System that Never Fails” to your shopping cart right now.



If you don’t agree this is the most informative and insightful information you have ever heard, we demand that you send it back to Amazon for a full refund. This information can make the difference in MLM Success or Failure for you and your team we know that so we are willing to take all the risk to prove it to you.


Product Features


  • ✪ Dale’s network marketing track record is documented mlm history❶➃ REASONS this CD should be in every SERIOUS NETWORK MARKETING LEADERS Library

  • ✪ You will learn the real secret to duplication & why most leaders talk about it but have no idea how to create it. Dale calls this concept “The Leadership Development Paridgmn Shift” and after you hear this it will be evident why taking the path most have taken to success, can never produce security and a business that can truly be passed down to your children

  • ✪ Dale’s one-on-one consulting fees start at $1,000 an hour. $20 for this 57 min. CD is the best investment you can make in your business. This special is only available on Amazon and only for two reasons. & because many people who hear this CD will immediately go on Dale’s personal consulting waiting list. Our company understands that average opportunity seekers are afraid to invest in themself and our clients are the cream of the crop in the network marketing industry

  • ✪ We know, “When the student is ready, the teacher will arrive” Quite frankly this CD network marketers that Dale classifies as “social club members”. If you are involved in mlm for the social aspects that is cool, but this CD is NOT for you. This is for the serious, career oriented network marketer, you know who you are. 100% money back guarantee, if this information doesn’t inspre you and give you a new insight into MLM Success, we demand you get a full refund.

  • ✪ The critical concepts Dale covers on this CD are one’s that make the difference when it comes to short term income and long term wealth in the network marketing industry

Click Here For More Information



Network Marketing Training CD - The Network Marketing Success System that Never Fails by Dale Calvert THE MLM PROFIT

There it is — the $300 ax you never knew you wanted

Deck the halls with stacks of catalogs, falalalala, lalalala. Also, the bathroom, the kitchen, the laundry and, while we’re at it, the bedside table, now topped with a tower of seasonal consumption literature.


‘Tis the season of excess, when retailers attempt to transform passive resisters into all-in enthusiasts through the mail, online or on ground.


Long labeled “wish books,” holiday gift catalogs have an uncanny knack of transforming objects you never thought you wanted into Things You Cannot Live Without. They scratch the itch that wasn’t there.


These seasonal tomes are the triumph of style and stylists over the real repositories of desire, not necessity. Hence, there’s no need for a wish book featuring black socks or scissors.


Unless … they’re Neiman Marcus black Nordic print cashmere socks or the Best Made Company’s Sheffield Kevlar Shears ($76), the latter arriving complete with their own origin story, like some superhero.


Last year, 12,513 distinct catalog publications were produced in the United States, as tallied by the Direct Marketing Association (DMA), and 11.1 million copies were mailed (possibly 2 million to your home). The number of mailed catalogs peaked at 19.6 million in 2007, right before the recession, and has declined since, in part because of the increase in online marketing.


But merchants still believe that the dead-wood wish book works wonders in getting people to shop, in the stores and online. “Catalogs are the best interpretation of the brand outside the brick-and-mortar store,” says DMA’s Neil O’Keefe. “Those pages have the best ability to convey the look and appeal. They’re more lifestyle and aspirational. That is a goal. You’re not going to have that same feeling from an email or website.”


These compendiums of longing are not tossed together like salad but edited and refined to reflect what we’re consuming now. And despite the variety of companies, they have a strikingly shared vision of what we should be buying this holiday season.


Such as a Chilean mine’s worth of copper products. It’s as if the poobahs of catalogs held a confab and decided that we all need copper mugs for our Moscow Mules (a vodka, ginger beer and lime concoction) on a matching copper tray.


Taking a cue from the granddaddy of all explanatory brochures, J. Peterman, a fairy tale of consumption festooned with illustrations instead of photos, some catalogs feel the need to explain their curious vision over and over again, with little subtlety.


A winner this season is Cuyana, which marries the current trend of “fewer, better gifts” with surrealist art. Apparently, Cuyana means “to love” in Quechua, the language of the central Andes, although the company is based in San Francisco and inspired by the Belgian painter Rene Magritte.


Someone at Cuyana had the twee notion of basing the catalog on Magritte’s famous painting of a pipe underlined by the sentence “This is not a pipe” in French. Page after page reads “This is not a catalog,” “This is not a tote,” “This is not a wallet.” Well, you get the point. Which is to make consumers take a longer look at a nice, streamlined — if unremarkable — collection of leather goods.


Best Made Company, the online catalog purveyor of the aforementioned Sheffield Kevlar Shields, eschews understatement right there in its name. This Web destination, along with The Field Outfitting Co., appeals to your inner glamper in a decidedly outward acquisitional manner: a $118 flask, an $8,000 coyote fur throw and — why not? — a comprehensive collection of axes. Just what you wanted: A $300 Hushabye Baby American Felling Axe with “24 page axe manual, a bridle leather blade guard and an embroidered badge.”


A few years ago, apparently based on some unilateral agreement that Americans were seriously lacking monograms, retailers decided that any gewgaw that could be mailed, toted or gifted was worthy of an emphatic initial or three. And so Mark and Graham was birthed, with an origin story that drops a tonnage of names (Gutenberg, Vuitton, Napoleon) in the pursuit of “next-generation personalization.”


Why does a deck of cards or a $250 “little bit hipster and a little bit rustic” cardigan need personalizing? Instead of Portlandia’s “Put a Bird On It,” Mark and Graham want to put a “B” on it. The company will personally brand all the season’s big trends: copper barware, plaid (which may look less comely in May) and — yes — totes, in suede, leather, herringbone, waxed canvas, camo.


A glossy tome from Frontgate, for the people who have one, arrives with the credo “outfitting America’s finest homes since 1991.” The target audience appears to be homeowners for whom more than enough is apparently not.


The $1,699 10-foot Natural SeriesT Christmas tree, which is nothing of the sort, comes already strung with lights. The Luxury Mahogany Pet Residence Dog Crate is yours for $499 to $599 (but free crate pad!).


Frontgate has a thing for “outdoor living” and is a leading advocate of that most curious aesthetic development, the outdoor rug. Isn’t the lawn an outdoor rug?


The RH Modern catalog almost knocked down the frontgate upon arrival. It offers more than 500 pages of austere modern furnishings styled in mausoleum-like settings where, it appears, nary a coffee cup dare tread. RH Modern comes from Restoration Hardware, which has nothing to do with hardware or the Restoration. We don’t know who, precisely, drunk-dials a $5,320 leather sofa without a test drive, but RH must know more than we do, or why else would these Britannicas of design arrive with such frightening regularity?


Karen Heller is a staff writer for The Washington Post.



There it is — the $300 ax you never knew you wanted