By: Lesley Fair
Multi-level
marketer Herbalife will pay $200 million back to people who were taken in by
what the FTC alleges were misleading moneymaking claims. But when it comes to
protecting consumers, that may not be the most important part of the
just-announced settlement. What could matter more than $200 million? An order that requires Herbalife to restructure its
business from top to bottom –
and to start complying with the law.
Advertising in English and Spanish, Herbalife pitched
its business opportunity as a way for people to quit their jobs and make the
big bucks. Other ads promoted Herbalife as a means for already hard-working
people to provide a little more for their families: “When we worked in
factories our earnings could only pay for basic needs, but now we can take our
12 grandkids on vacations.”
But don’t start packing the kids’ bags because
according to the FTC, it’s virtually impossible to make money selling Herbalife
products. As explained in the complaint, our analysis shows that half of Herbalife “Sales Leaders” earned on
average less than $5 a month from product sales. For folks who invested the
most to build an actual retail business – a brick-and-mortar store that
Herbalife called a Nutrition Club – the majority made nothing or even lost
money.
Which brings us to the inconvenient little secret
about Herbalife that the FTC’s complaint alleges: The small number of
distributors who actually made money made it not by selling products to people
who wanted the company’s powders, pills, and potions, but rather by recruiting
others to serve as distributors – and encouraging them to buy Herbalife products.
The lawsuit alleges that Herbalife deceived consumers
into believing they could earn substantial income from the business opportunity
or big money from the retail sale of the company’s products. In addition, the
complaint charges that one of the fundamental principles of Herbalife’s
business model – incentivizing distributors to buy products and to recruit
others to join and buy products so they could advance in the company’s
marketing program, rather than in response to actual consumer demand – is an
unfair practice in violation of the FTC Act.
Under the settlement, that all has to change. The order requires Herbalife to drop its
current system of rewarding distributors primarily for recruiting a “downline”
of people who will buy the product at wholesale, without regard to whether
there are customers out there who really want the merchandise. Under the new
compensation structure, success in the Herbalife marketing program must depend
on whether participants sell products, not on whether they can
recruit additional distributors to buy products.
You’ll want to read the order for the detailed dos and don’ts, but they’re all
closely tied to the law violations alleged in the complaint. Here’s just one
example: The order requires a clear differentiation between people who join
just to buy discounted products for their own use and those who join the
business opportunity. For people in the bizopp, 2/3 of rewards must be based on
verifiable retail sales, with no more than 1/3 coming from product designated
as “personal consumption.”
And it’s not a “we’ll take your word for it” thing.
The order includes teeth that will put a financial bite on non-compliance. To
make sure everyone at Herbalife is on board with the new set-up, 80% of the
company’s net sales will have to be real sales to real buyers. If that doesn’t
happen, the rewards that high-level distributors pocket will be cut. What’s
more, for the next seven years, Herbalife has to hire an Independent Compliance
Auditor to monitor what the company is doing to comply with the new
compensation plan. The Auditor will report to the FTC, who will have the
authority to replace that person should it become necessary.
We’re glad to be returning $200 million to consumers.
(Details about the refund program will be available soon.) But another key goal
is to dismantle the alleged deception and unfairness built into how Herbalife
does business. As the company rewrites its advertising claims and restructures
its compensation system, we’ll be watching. The Auditor will be watching. And
consumers should be watching, too.
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