Anonymous wrote:I could have watched an episode of just the dude who worked for them for 14 months and wanted to watch the IRS takedown from a nearby patio sipping vodka and cran. š
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why aren't the college and universities where these women paid tuition and took out student loans also considered MLM? That's the ultimate marketing scam and pyramid scheme. LLR was successful because these college educated SAHM moms didn't have careers but had a lot of college debt. I hear stories like this all the time, where a college grad in debt will go further in debt to pay off the student loan debt.
LuLaRoe's whole initial shtick was that it allowed women to keep their SAHM title but still earn income. For certain types of religious women, particularly LDS women, this is a golden unicorn. Most of the women profiled COULD have gotten real jobs because they had the education to do so, but they wanted the SAHM lifestyle. This is one thing that makes LLR a little different than some of the other MLMs; when starting off they specifically went after educated white women who weren't financially desperate.
I agree that regulations re: federal student loans need to be tightened considerably. Specifically, universities that have poor graduation rates and offer low ROI should be banned from receiving them, as should any for profit university. Someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but the students' tuition and graduation at these places isn't dependent upon recruiting other students, which is why they aren't considered MLMs. Not to say they aren't shitty, but it's a different business model from what I understand.
Anonymous wrote:Is there anyone here that bought their leggings? I prefer solid colored leggings but it was a thing that LLR had "buttery" leggings that apparently felt amazing. I have always wondered if there was any truth to that.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if that couple featured in the doc (the ones who were fired from LLR) moved on to another MLM. They were a high earning couple (at least in the beginning) and that company consumed so much of their life together. Where do you go from there?Anonymous wrote:It is⦠something else, watching them flee various MLMs like rats from a sinking ship and move on to the next one. Because this one is different and special, donāt you know! And these girlbosses really believe in the product, and donāt you want to work from home and support other women?
I wonder if that couple featured in the doc (the ones who were fired from LLR) moved on to another MLM. They were a high earning couple (at least in the beginning) and that company consumed so much of their life together. Where do you go from there?Anonymous wrote:It is⦠something else, watching them flee various MLMs like rats from a sinking ship and move on to the next one. Because this one is different and special, donāt you know! And these girlbosses really believe in the product, and donāt you want to work from home and support other women?
Anonymous wrote:Why donāt they make solid colored leggings and more black ones since they have broad appeal? Is this so that they can sell large bulk amounts to reps who will keep buying until they have things that are actually sellable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It preys on less educated SAHMs. DC is full of educated women with jobs.
Not the ones I knew....educated, all of them.