The truth about the DCHL Lampe Berger trial exposed by a former dealer

To tell you the truth, you are curious about this DCHL stuff and the Lampe Berger product and you are one of the three people. Either you are a current DCHL distributor who will probably jump right in and say this is not a scam and it is legit, or you are another one who thinks MLM is another scam and never wants to feel ripped off by this, or ultimately you are just the person in between who is just curious what all the fuss is about.

I am going to download the experience of a former DCHL dealer who still uses the Lampe Berger product. Even though I failed in this venture and lost money (just like I made it), I’m going to be up front and say that DCHL is not a Ponzi Ponzi (that’s probably the most common and retarded assumption that those with NO idea of ​​direct sales like to make all the time. They have no idea how retarded they sound when they always ask the same “Oh, is it a Ponzi Scam?” etc.) and is a legit MLM company that seems to be a hobbyist to market French antique-based products.

Now I can get into another whole argument about how MLM is not a Ponzi scheme or whatever you want to call it, I’m just here to let you know about my experience with DCHL. Although there are several reasons why this company is amazing and badass, there are also several flaws that probably explained why I am not at DCHL today. Many of the current DCHL dealers will probably try to bite me, but this is my experience and here are my thoughts.

I’m not here to do a sales demo for DCHL. I already told you I’m not a distributor anymore so I have nothing to gain by telling you how absolutely amazing the products are (as expected of most MLM companies). I mainly use what is perceived as DCHL’s flagship product: the Lampe Berger. In fact, I still use it today. But that’s not really the reason why people join an MLM company, is it? Contrary to what many MLM newbies do, people don’t join DCHL because the products are attractive, they join these deals because they want to make money. I know a lot of people are gritting their teeth when I say that, but face it: if they just want the products, why don’t we all become customers? Of course, we were also in it for the money.

And that’s exactly what I did. I made money as a DCHL distributor selling Lampe Berger products to almost anyone I could think of, from personal contacts to restaurants, bars and even corporate organizations. I invested about $11,000 in the products so I could resell them and move up to ‘Recount’ status (fancy distributor level) so I could earn higher commissions or something. I had a successful run for a short time with DCHL as I made a lot of contacts through my experience and spread the word to some nice bars and lounges who started using the product.

So there was no doubt that the products were popular for a while. I even tried to branch out into the Estebel and Ed Pinaud fragrance range, which were also other DCHL product lines. I’ve managed to sell most of those things to my personal contacts and close friends rather than to companies.

This may be a unique experience for me, so I am not speaking on behalf of anyone else. I was a dealer from Melbourne and I’ll be honest and say the logistics for this absolutely suck. But that was probably my fault. I had a hard time ordering the products in BULK and then having to deliver them myself (Lampe Berger essential oils were flammable) and I had to store boxes and boxes of the product at my house and a friend’s house because I had no space left (I had to order in bulk, remember?).

I don’t recall DCHL having an office in Melbourne at the time, so you couldn’t walk into a warehouse and pick up the goods. I had to order them in Sydney or something and they were delivered to my home address (I couldn’t exactly get them delivered to each customer individually, because everything came in bulk!). From my experience in this business (probably not DCHL’s fault), I decided that I am done with physical products.

But that was not the end. I saved the best for last on this one. This is the biggest trick that many MLM companies lacked, including perhaps DCHL (at the time), and WHY 97% of people FAIL on deals like this. Once again, I’ll shoot straight with this and say outright, disregarding everyone else who probably wants to take me down: training absolutely sucked.

Training, you say? Yeah, they have amazing product training. They taught us how to use the Lamps, and they even taught a lot of the distributors how to use the cosmetics and stuff. But that’s NOT the type of training I’m talking about, folks.

Let’s put it this way: yes, I made some decent money selling DCHL products. I made a decent amount of money selling Lampe Berger to my contacts, who were both personal friends and people higher up the corporate ladder. But the problem was that these qualities were, in most cases, unique to me. And the people I sponsored? They were full-time workers, who probably didn’t have the motivation to network and connect with people as much as I did. They did not have the connections that I had or the resources that I had to be able to market Lampe Berger products.

What does that mean? Remember, like most MLM opportunities, DCHL had a pay plan that made you the most money by sponsoring downlines and duplicating. The skills, resources, and connections I had were certainly NOT duplicated by the people I prospected. So what happened was I struggled to sponsor people because hardly anyone was willing to do what I was doing.

Make sense? I’m not trying to fully blame DCHL for this much more than I have myself to blame for this. But training still sucked. What training did I receive, you ask? Well, it’s the same damn training that A LOT of MLM companies suck at. They had almost no proper training in MARKETING!

Any DCHL distributor or anyone who has been in the business should know that MARKETING and SALES are the only things in the business that make money with Lampe Berger.

What did DCHL uplines teach to market Lampe Berger? Make a list of your family, friends and other contacts and start prospecting them with FORMHD (it’s been so long I even forgot what it means now). Other than that, it was just talk to people, talk to people, talk to people.

I know it’s a lot of fun now, but back then, that’s how we used to shoot at DCHL. Make a list of your friends and family, and then start including them in your deal. We now know that this is NOT how you build a business. Yeah, it’s funny that we actually did that. But that was the only marketing we were trained in. So, in a way, it wasn’t our fault.

If DCHL had a proper training system that actually taught people how to market Lampe Berger in such a way as to get extremely TARGET buyers (marketing is about targeting, after all) to absolutely FALL IN LOVE with BUYING their Lampe Berger products, then maybe more people would not only see easy success but also have MASSIVE DUPLICATION (which is how you make a lot of money in MLM).

While it’s true that I don’t have DCHL (I mentioned being done with physical products, mostly for logistical reasons), but I also use Lampe Berger products from time to time (I still have some stock left over from the old days), I now know how the damn marketing works that anyone can do to sell any (hence easily duplicatable) product in any MLM.

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