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Thursday 4 September 2014

The Truth About GNLD Marketing Vacancies on Job Sites In Nigeria

I saw this on Nairaland and decided to share it with
you. Read carefully and share with friends.


Wellness homes claims to be a health
maintenance organisation but they are just a
distributor of a foreign company known as
GNLD. Wellness homes has many
subsidiaries such as bloomnet, healthstream
alliance and keylinks golgen concept, Accent
Hills (Now in Akure) Etc.
Mind you, they are not fraudsters. But just
that they are not open. They won't tell you the
truth until you are in. Wellness homes which
is located on 9 oremeji street, isolo Lagos
claims to be a health maintenance
organisation and they advertise fake jobs on
Nigerian job portals.
They claim to be in search graduates to work
as business development executives, client
relations officers, admin officers etc. They
advertise these fake jobs on jobsites and after
you have applied, they send you text message
inviting you for an interview at no 9 oremeji
street, isolo, lagos or at any of their branches.
Notice that the text message arrives late on
the day before the interview. This is done in
order for you not to be able to verify the
address. Just type 9 oremeji street in google
and you will find many stories about it.
On arrival at the interview, graduates that
have traveled from distant parts of Nigeria in
the hope that a genuine company wants to
interview them for a job discover that is not
the case. Wellness homes and its
subsidiaries are just distributors of
supplements.
In Nigeria today, the demand for supplements
is low and the people at wellness homes
know this but they have to sell their products.
And what better way to sell their products
than to lure unsuspecting jobseekers into
purchasing their products. That is the truth
about wellness homes, they are wholesalers
and they want you to buy their products. They
are the sellers and you are the buyer.
In my professional opinion I won't advice you
to purchase the supplements because there is
no demand for it. The people at wellness
homes know this, if the demand is there why
cant they sell it themselves and keep the
profits for themselves.
Wellness homes charge jobseekers =N=
8500 for training to become a nutritionist,
but again the market is not there for
nutritionists. In my professional opinion I
won't advice you to pay the training fee of
=N=8500. It is after you have paid the
training fee of =N=8500 that they inform you
that they are distributors and that you have to
buy their supplements. The minimum you
can buy is around =N=30,000 worth of
supplements. If you sell this =N=30,000
worth of supplements you will make around
=N=48,000 as revenue giving you a profit of
=N=18,000. But the demand is not there and
you may end up not selling the supplements
for months or years.
The issue with wellness homes is that they
are not operating illegally, all they do is to
deceive jobseekers into paying =N=8500 for
training and into buying their products.
Because they are not operating illegally, you
can't file a lawsuit against them or call the
police. But what you can do is to demand a
refund of your =N=8500 training fee because
they did not inform you that you have to buy
their supplements.
If they refuse to refund your training fee, then
you can sue them or call the police.
=N=8500 may seem like small money but if
1000 jobseekers don't ask for a refund the
amount they make from unsuspecting
jobseekers is =N=8,500,000. Also, if 1000
jobseekers purchase =N=30,000 worth of
supplements, the amount they make from
unsuspecting jobseekers is =N=30,000,000
worth of supplements.
The more products unsuspecting jobseekers
buy from them, the more profits they make as
wholesalers plus the foreign company known
as GNLD pays them more commission and
gives them travel benefits. Please be
informed that this travel benefit is only for the
few top bosses of wellness homes. But they
trick you into believing that you can also
become one of the top bosses by selling more
supplements.
The fact is that you will never sell enough
supplements because the market is not there.
But wellness homes have their market, you
are their market. They are more or less
dumping the supplements on you. My advice
to you is to ask for a refund of your training
fee and get out.
Wellness homes also claim to test people
with a machine known as the quantum
resonance body analyzer. They claim that
this device can test 30 internal organs of the
body, but is that so? In my professional
opinion, in order to test internal organs of the
body, you need to take not only one blood test
but a series of blood and sample tests so how
can a mechanical device test the functioning
of your internal organs without blood or
sample tests.
Also, there is not enough information on the
Chinese made quantum machine by western
scientists. If the machine is truly genuine
then more information will be available to
everyone. In my professional opinion it is not
possible to test the functioning of internal
organs without blood or sample tests.=
Wellness homes lure unsuspecting
jobseekers into paying the training fee and in
to buying their products by informing the
jobseekers that wellness homes will provide
them with the quantum machine in order to
carry out tests on Nigerians at a price of
around =N= 4000 per test. They in form the
jobseekers that the jobseekers can test over
100 people per day resulting in a revenue of
=N= 400,000 per day.
They claim to pay jobseekers all of the
revenue made form the quantum tests. But
why are they so generous? If the test is truly
genuine why can't they carry out the test
themselves and keep the profits for
themselves. They do this to lure jobseekers
into paying the =N=8500 training fee. I
don't know whether or not they carry out the
quantum test on Nigerians or not but in my
professional opinion it is not possible for
mechanical device to test the functioning of
internal body organs. You might as well test
your internal organs with a boiling ring or a
gas cooker as far as I am concerned.
The main trick jobseekers fall for is the lie
that you can make =N=4000 per test. I am
sure that Nigerians are not silly and they will
rather go to a public hospital for a blood and
sample test than to spend =N=4000 on a
phantom machine. You may have read blogs
about people claiming to make lots of money
from quantum tests but it is probably the
people at wellness homes that that put the
message on the blog in order to deceive
jobseekers.
My advice to jobseekers is to demand a refund
a refund of their training fee. But again if you
believe that you can sell their products, it is
up to you. But the truth is that the market is
not there but wellness homes have their
market, you are their market. Wellness
homes don't offer jobs, they are just
wholesalers of products that nobody wants to
buy. My advice to jobseekers is to google the
addresses of the interview before you go for
the interview. For your information 9 oremeji
street, isolo is a bungalow located in a
residential neighborhood and there is no
signboard on the building.

Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in comments are
those of the comment writers alone and does not
reflect or represent the views of Somayina.

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