I went to their site and applied..and then freaked when I realized what it was.
Basically think of Pampered Chef, Mary Kay and all that stuff.
Now instead of cooking items or makeup...it is some medical benefits stuff (not insurance of course...I never did find out exactly what it was) that you are "selling". Now--how do you "sell" this. I didn't get the full scoop--but the gist is you have a web page...and you somehow let everyone know and when they buy from you--that is how you make money. It is totally multi-level marketing. I'm on a pregnancy board and saw the link in someone's siggy. And on her site--not only can you buy it...she too can tell you all about it and help you in the door. I'm sure just like any other MLM, there's some type of incentive for recruits.
I never went through--I have an e-mail in my inbox some where from my "recruiter". If I dig it up, I can maybe finagle some more info for you. They wanted to only speak with me on the phone, but I insisted on an explanation in writing and it took 2 requests before she gave me even basic info. That was my second red flag. The first was the promise of income from only 10 hours a week and in such a such time you could make $x. No thanks! Not into that one bit.
For legitimate opps check out
www.workplacelikehome.com . They actually list some legitimate work at home opportunites that replicate working in a building somewhere...but a way to supplement your income from the comfort of your own home.
One of the mods actually compiled a list of opps:
http://www.workplacelikehome.com/forum/showthread.php?t=60
None of these places are MLM...most you would work for as an independent contractor and usually you can set your own hours based on available schedule. Most you are payed a per minute rate of talk time, or for other jobs per word or submission or some other type of per actual work arrangement. Very legitimate--though work very much ebbs and flows...I'm in a ditch right now making very little...but what goes down always goes back up.
I don't think of MLM as a "scam" per se. I think they are just like all the diet commercials with their super trim spokespeople. *results not typical. So I'm sure someone makes 6 figures in a year, but that is not characteristic of all of a company's MLM workers.