Brief Isagenix Review From Non-Affiliated Viewpoint
March 9th, 2011Isagenix is touted as a company that wants to impact world health, according to their website. Skin care, cleansing and overall nutrition are the three divisions of Isagenix products.
One of their products, Sanitize For Life, one of Isagenix’s most favourite products, is sold as a weight loss helper and claims to wage increased general health and energy levels. This comes in minimum quantities of two bottles (32 ounces each) and is intended to last for two days of your cleansing regimen. This Cleans For Life product seems to be the mainstay of their 30 day complete cleansing routine. The same is also part of an accelerated cleansing program, which is 9 days. Isagenix claims that one should anticipate a 7 lb weight loss over this 9 days. Also, they seem to have much in the way of meal replacement options.
One can buy all the products the Isagenix website, or you can order through independent retailers. The Isagenix marketing model is very much like that of Avon’s.
The company website supplies complete ingredient lists for all of its products. I’m not necessarily sold on the theory of all these pills and such being billed as the complete solution for weight loss. I’d place it there that most folks can find success implementing a low calorie diet, exercising regularly and a single, effective weight loss supplement, or even no weight-loss products at all. I hate to think just how many people are taking some sort of weight loss product without being certain of the doable effects, simply because they are desperate to look better.
The listed ingredients for the Sanitize for Life product are Pau d’Arco inner bark, Aloe Vera leaf, suma root, IsaLyte trace minerals, eleutherococcus senticosus root extract, fennel seed, burdock root, peppermint leaf, licorice root, choline bitartrate, inositol, betain HCL and I-methionine. Sometimes I get the impression that many of these companies only place things in their products with uncommon obloquy so that people will be in mystery as to what it does, or what it is supposed to do. As a kid I had hordes of Burdock growing around the edges of the yard. Never realized it could be used for losing weight. Never heard of such a thing. And I don’t know what any of this stuff is apart from peppermint and aloe. And if anyone comes at me with choline bitartrate they are going to get it!
Nothing on this list that is noted as a proven, effective supplement for weight loss. Even Though many of the components might be relatively healthy in other ways, It might be more effective to find a proven fat burner and appetite suppressant on the list for maximum weight loss benefit. Recognized weight loss substances are noticeably absent from the above list.
I can go on for quite some time about the products as there are lots of them.
I initially started to review this company as far as one’s capability to create a substantial income as an independent retailer. I had a lot of trouble locating any solid numbers being provided by anyone out there who is truly doing very well with it in terms of making money.
Isagenix pays it’s retailers with a binary income matrix. It’s my least favorite of all network marketing pay plans. I never liked the concept of getting paid only on the smaller leg. It makes one equilibrium their downline but it also presents a evenhandedly small percentage of revenue being paid out. In a case like this, the company is only paying out on less than half of it’s volume right off the bat. The Isagenix website specifies an average profit margin around 30%. So what one is really looking at in terms of income potential is having to sell tons and tons of product and recruit massively to even make any recruiting efforts worthwhile.
In the binary you have two legs under you which you add people to as your sponsor them. You will be putting your new recruits into the smaller of the two legs and trying your best to manage and equilibrium them because you will only be paid on the small leg. Sometimes it’s hard to manage whom you are placing where in your downline and often makes it hard to predict the future production. Essentially, you will receive few dollars per month, for each person, within your smaller leg.
In my observation, as a biz opp, Isagenix could be best suited for individuals who are using the products because they have gotten good physical results with them, or know others who have, and so they have a strong belief in the value of the products more so than dry greed and interest in just making money, but perhaps in getting the products at a discount and making a bit of extra income here and there as they build their downline. But just evaluating it in terms of sheer income potential it doesn’t look to be very strong.
This is not to state that it is not viable or worthy of one’s time. I meet people who have been using Shackley products and selling them for 20+ years, making several thousand extra dollars per year and they are perfectly happy with this. And for some folks a business such as this one serves as a social life. And that is exactly why I love this industry. I feel like my work-day is my social life.
It seems to me, a product line link this could be very conducive to a retail store-front. If you’ve got a substantial local population interested in wellness products, and certainly if you control your own health food or grocery store then this could be a great way to market such products, in contrast to the traditional method of word of mouth. Of course, this would be nearly entirely a retail income strategy than it would a recruitment strategy.
I’m not a distributor for Isagenix and I have never personally used the products.
I was only hoping to get more reality on the company and shed some light on the income potentialities from a 3rd celebration standpoint.
Related posts:
- How to Lose Weight Naturally If you’re thinking about losing weight at one time or...
- Meladerm: A Review on It One skin whitening products which is making a study on...
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.





