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    • Well, that's it then. Clear proof of the rubbish cameras. Clear proof of double dipping. G24 won't be getting a penny. Belt & braces, I would write to the address LFI has found, include the evidence of double dipping, and ask Fraser Group to call their dogs off.
    • LOL. after sending Perch capital a CCA request with a stapled £1 PO attached (x2) Their lapdog Legal team TM Legal have sent me two letters today saying "due to a recent payment on the account, your account is open to legal/enforcement action" so i guess they have tried to apply that payment to the account to run the statue bar along. dirty tactics lol.
    • I have initiated the breathing space so ill wait. from re reading everything this what i understand BS gives me 60 days break from the creditors during these 60 days they may contact me and will most likely default I need to wait until after a default notice to see whether the OC will keep the debt or sell it off If kept by the OC then i should attempt a plan or pay some token payment? If sold to DCA then don't pay and after 6 years it will leave my credit report once the DN is registered with a date. DCA may start a CCJ but unlikely, if they do come back here. last question, do you know roughly how long this will all take? in terms of defaults/default notice, potential CCJ? Would you say I have 12 months plus from when the BS ends?
    • Well, it's up to you. Years & years & years ago the forum used to suggest appealing to POPLA, but then AFAIK POPLA's remit was changed and it became much more biased in favour of the PPCs. One of the problems with taking that route is that the onus will fall on you to prove your appeal, while if you do nothing the onus is on MET to start legal action which experience teaches they are very, very reluctant to do. If you go down the POPLA route I would think your ace would be insufficient signage.  Are you able to go back there and get photos of their rubbish, entrapping signs?
    • The first clearly visible sign as you pull in to the car park states “McDonald’s Customers Only 60 minutes” The next clearly visible sign is an almost identical sign outside Starbucks which states “60 minutes free stay for customers only” There are other signs towards the rear of the car park (away from the outlets) that have the terms and conditions on them in very small print.
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Betterware Distributors Problem


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I have tried being a Betterware distributor for a couple of weeks and it's not a good company to work for.

 

It trades under a typically American, high pressure, model of operating.

 

 

The co-ordinators are pressured into placing a high level of orders which, in turn, means that they have to pressure their distributors to get a high level.

 

 

My co-ordinator has been pressuring me to deliver 300 catalogues since day 1.

 

 

Like the original contributer I am only getting a very small amount of catalogues back.

This seems to have annoyed her but I am not "hunting" streets so that I can make the numbers up.

 

 

My orders have been sparse (around £180 in two weeks).

It will be interesting to see if she suddenly mentions a minimum order total.

 

 

In addition to this, I have been bitten by a dog, which is not Betterware's responsibility and left me wondering just how many times this could happen to me during a working week.

 

Betterware is advertised as a part time job that you can fit around the rest of your life.

IT'S NOTHING OF THE SORT .

It is a 7 day a week job and it takes over your life.

 

 

The earnings are not worth the effort that you put in.

I wanted to start as a distributor and then become a co-ordinator but I could not recruit someone into this kind of working environment.

 

The OP's experience of being told to scavenge in bins for catalogues probably says more about his co-ordinator than the job. BUT, it is not a job I will be recommending to anyone.

And it's back to being a jobhunter for me

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  • 1 year later...

You had a very unfortunate experience with betterware.

 

 

Ive been a distributor for 22 years and it suits me just fine.

Yes it has been hard work,

not easy,

out in the rain,

snow,

cold,

hungry,

but meeting people and making friends and earning 25quid a week to start with,

then doing more i earned up to 80-100quid.

I enjoy it, but as i said, its not easy.

But it is not the companys fault that new distributors have bad experiences.

 

 

Depending on your co-ordinator,

i.e. how helpful they are and patient they are

can depend on whether a distributor stays or not,

 

 

and its the co-ordinator who sometimes give distributors the wrong impression of betterware;

some are helpful, some arnt,

some are understanding, some arnt,

some are honest, some arnt. I

 

 

lost alot of books, they got wet through, ripped up, threw away.......

..... its when your faced with these situations, you decide what your going to do.

 

 

For me, it was an eye opener on people and how they are.

But it was better than being stuck at home, and unknowingly,

this job was building my confidence up no end.

 

 

I didnt start betterware for the money you see,

i wanted to get out and meet people,

i had a 6 month old baby.

 

 

But no, it wasnt fair that xxx said he would only give you 10%,

like he said,

he was covering his own costs first,

but this incident has nothing to do with betterware as a company,

that was the c.o's decision. A

 

 

nd he should have processed your order,

he should have given you some time to build up your sales.

 

 

Its incidents like this that realy do give betterware such a bad reputation as a waste of time and a con.

 

 

Yes it is hard to start with, every established distributor will tell you that.

But many have made it and enjoy it.

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