Thursday, February 7, 2013

what to do when you are invited to a seminar about network marketing health vitamin supplements?

network health
 on Wave3, The New Era in Network Marketing by Richard Poe,
network health image



le sabre


well, out of friendship, i was invited and attended one yesterday. but i did not sign up yet.
shall i be expecting from them to call me up again? what will i politely say to refuse?
i hear they are agressive and they have these tricky recruiting technique.



Answer
Well ...here's where you get to find out if they really are a "friend." Tell the person thank you but your really not interested ..at all.
Yes they may have been taught some wonderful come backs to over come your objections.... that's O.K. ( Matter of fact, that's great , I'll show you why in a moment)

Again (politely) tell them no thank you, it's just not what you want to do. Let them go on 2 maybe 3 times ( you did say it was a friend right? ) and then look them square in the eye and tell the person.
" THIS is why I DON'T want to join your company. I'm NOT going to ask people over & over to join something they don't want to do."

Note: sometimes they simply bring a third person along to make it even more difficult for you to say NO. If it gets to much and you feel weird about it just tell them " I think I'm going to throw up, this is starting to make me sick." I'm not kidding that should do the trick.

Hope this helps,
Mike
P.S. You really don't want to join any of those networking companies.

what does in network mean health insurance?




Sagittariu


I am re enrolling for helath insurance a little confuse don what in net work means? Is this how much you pay if your in the hospital and you have to hit this ammount before your deductiable?


Answer
No. Your insurance (if an HMO or PPO plan - as most are) has a "network" of doctors/hospitals who have contracted with your insurer as participants in your specific plan. They are "in network" and using them means lower out-of-pocket costs for you.

Does a Home Wireless Network pose a health risk in the long term?

Q. I have a wireless network at home with my room housing the access point. Considering that its left on most of the time (if not 24/7), and i'm a bit of a worrywart, is there a health risk involved? Physics is not my strong point so I'm not really sure how radio waves interact with the human body. Isn't the op. frequency of 2.4GHz similar to that of a Microwave Oven?


Answer
The signal strength for a wireless router is not concentrated enough or strong enough to do any harm.

Most average routers are rated in the milliwatt range...not very much at all.




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