Anonymous wrote:1:49 is correct, especially if you are alone at home w/ a child. There have been several instances in Great Falls where men opened the door for someone (need directions? help? Can I use your phone? whatever) and then two men blast in, wrapped the man up in duct tape and took everything.
Anonymous wrote:^^. Same. Same story from the seller too. I think it was Usborne, maybe? We used those books from 9 months till 6 at least.
I don't think there's anything sinister. I just think it's the sales model that hasn't caught up with the 21st century.
Had a friend in college who used to do this but that was 1994. I think Usborne probably needs to catch up with the crime drama television generation
Anonymous wrote:Back to the original question: has anyone in the DC area encountered this type (this product) of salesman?
Anonymous wrote:My husband did this as a college job about 20 years ago. It sounds exactly the same. The students get assigned to a neighborhood (often hundreds of miles from home) and work 12 hour days knocking on doors trying to get people to buy educational books. He actually made money doing it but it's very tough to do so. It's commission based and unless you are pushy it's hard to get a sale.
Anonymous wrote:I actually opened the door to some of these salesman before and bought a hard cover set of subject area books for the kids. THE BEST PURCHASE I EVER MADE. Can you believe it. I go to them all the time. I still can't believe I fell for it and bought them, but I've never seen anything before or after like them.