Fraudulent network marketing firms spoil it for the
bunch in Vietnam
Police and market
watchdog officers seize products from a branch of network marketing firm
Thien Ngoc Minh Uy in Gia Lai Province, located in Vietnam's Central
Highlands.Tuoi Tre
While multilevel marketing is
legal in Vietnam, fraudulent variants of the scheme have blindsided a lot of
people with promises of easy earnings before eventually appropriating large
sums of money from them.
As of the
end of last year, there were 65 licensed multilevel marketing firms, 11 of
which were foreign owned, across the country, according to the Vietnam Multi
Level Marketing Association (MLMA).
In 2015,
Vietnam’s multilevel marketing sector reported more than VND7 trillion
(US$312.5 million) in revenue, with 1.4 million distributors receiving a
total of VND2.1 trillion ($93.75 million) in commission, according to the
Ministry of Industry and Trade.
For most
network marketing firms, salespeople not only sell their products but also
encourage others to join the companies as a distributor. A person will
receive commission not only for the sales they generate, but also for the
sales of the other distributors they recruit.
However
there are firms in Vietnam that only urge people to buy their products and
recruit as many distributors as possible without pressuring them to sell
anything.
There are
also companies that promise to pay commissions to distributors even when they
do not receive any products to re-sell, or those that recruit salespeople to
do nothing.
“These are
all illegal forms of network marketing,” said Truong Thi Nhi, chairwoman of
the MLMA.
In
legitimate multilevel marketing business, selling goods is a must, and a
person is only compensated on the sales they generate, or the new
distributors they recruit, Nhi explained.
“But many
firms do not focus on selling products and instead seek to recruit as many
salespeople as possible,” she said.
Another kind
of fraudulent multilevel marketing company is those that sell poor-quality
products at exorbitant prices and offer hefty commissions to newly recruited
distributors.
At workshops
to recruit salespeople, these firms talk little about their products, but
blind people with promises of a bright future for doing nothing and still
being able to rake in dozens of millions of dong per month. (VND1 million =
$45)
Most
fraudulent network marketing companies usually encourage people to buy their
products without a proper contract, enabling them to easily swindle
distributors out of money.
“Another
sign in recognizing a fraudulent multilevel marketing firm is them not
allowing salespeople to return the purchased products,” Nhi said.
According to
the law on multilevel marketing, a distributor is permitted to return the
goods and take back their money within 30 days from purchase for any reason,
Nhi explained.
Kon Tum, a
mountainous province in the Central Highlands with a large population of the
Gie Trieng ethnic minority, has emerged as a lucrative destination for
multilevel marketing firms.
A Lan,
residing in the province’s Dak Glei District, has paid VND36.6 million
($1,634) to buy four packs of coffee and a pack of tea from a pyramid selling
firm, in exchange for a “VIP membership.”
Lan said the
company had promised to pay him back the initial investment, plus VND99
million ($4,420) in commission after nine months, which he never received.
In Kon Tum,
the number of these companies rose to 19 in 2015, with 4,190 people recruited
as distributors.
This man in Kon Tum paid VND5 million ($2.4) for a Chinese electric oven to join a multilevel marketing network. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Vietnam has
recently cracked down on many networking marketing firms for swindling, most
recently the Hanoi-based Lien Ket Viet Co.
On February
20, leaders of Lien Ket Viet were arrested and initial police
reports show that the company has appropriated a total of VND1.9 trillion
($85 million) from 45,000 people.
“Firms like
Lien Ket Viet make use of the multilevel marketing scheme for fraudulent
purposes and are not real network marketing companies,” said Phan Duc Que,
head of the unhealthy competition office at the Vietnam Competition
Authority.
“People who
want easy money have fallen victim to such companies, and there are also
those who know it is an illegal scheme but still join because they are so
thirsty for profit.”
Nhi from the
MLMA suggested the Criminal Code be amended to “criminally charge those who
take advantage of the network marketing scheme for fraud.”
“This will
deter swindlers and kick fraudulent firms out of the multilevel marketing
market,” she said.
TUOI TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Hai, 29 tháng 2, 2016
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