This domain name expired on 2021-02-24 11:59:59 Click here to renew it. Related Searches: YouTube Videos Download Free Movies TV Episodes TV Channels Video Clip Downloads 2019 Movie Clips Down...
tl;dr thousands of these front companies open and close every year all around the world, all spamming the same vague marketing jobs that seem too good to be true. It's actually a super secretive, super controversial MLM recruitment operation that's been running for 40 years, constantly changing its name to try and outrun it's horrible reputation. For more information, research Smart Circle/Cydcor/Credico.... Hey Chattanooga. Just doing one of my regular public service announcements about these deceptive spam job ads. This time they're coming from a company called Tri-State Marketing. I've posted about these companies every so often and people seem to appreciate the warning, so I'm just passing along the latest. Here's their site: Like all the other companies in their network, they spam super vague job ads and aggressively recruit online for jobs that do not really exist. Their goal is to get you in for a "first round interview" which is really like a sales pitch for their "management training program. "
Maybe this is the kind of job you're looking for, and if that's the case then go for it. But people deserve to know the truth about the job and the company before replying to a deceptive job ad or going in for a misleading high-pressure interview/pitch. Especially now, with the Coronavirus health concerns. Nobody should get tricked into standing around inside Walmart all day, trying to talk to every passing customer. Times are tough and people need work. So these companies will definitely exploit that. They also go hard after recent college grads. So if you've got any in your family, let them know. I've spent the last couple years working on a podcast about these companies here in Chattanooga. I'm done with it now, and hopefully I can have it posted and ready to share in a couple weeks.
They'll never mention what the job is until your first day of work, and will try and keep you from learning the name of the larger MLM for as long as possible. That's because this MLM group has an absolutely terrible reputation. It started in the late 70's as DS-Max. They'd train door-to-door salesmen to resell cheap junk and recruit others to buy inventories and sell also. Then they realized it was cheaper and easier to sell coupons instead of actual products -- kinda like Groupon before the internet. Then they transitioned into selling contracts for cable and telecom companies like DirecTV and Xfinity at Walmart and Costco. Most controversially, they also have a third party charity solicitation division where they raise a bunch of money for a charity and keep most of it. The idea is that if you work really hard for a year or two on commission and pay your "owner" part of your commission, and he pay the owners above him part of the commission too, then you'll earn your promotion to being an "owner" as well -- at which point you transition to recruiting full time and use the aggressive sales tactics you learned in the field to try and recruit new people into the pyramid-shaped business model.