A review by Innocent Chia Albert and Lema Nsah are, for all intents and purposes, the embodiment of the typical immigrant that settles wholesale for the American dream because motherland mostly offers a little less than a nightmare. They have walked through the valley of the shadow of doubt, insecurity and uncertainty: picking and choosing which bills to pay and which to pay at another date; cringing at the thought of walking the tight rope between home ownership and homelessness; wondering whether returning “home” with nothing to show for is an option… But all of that anxiety is nothing more than a story in a book that Albert and Lema authored about what has brought them unsuspecting success – Network Marketing.
If the title “The Rising Star” sounds like a screenplay for the movies it is because the change of fortunes for Lema and Albert encapsulates the rags to riches stories reminiscent of Hollywood. The difference between the Hollywood motion picture and this work of reality is the goal of the authors. Hollywood seeks to entertain you such that you temporarily forget about the daily headaches that are your reality. The Rising Star, on the other hand, offers a way out of the headaches that are your reality. It does this to the reader that believes that network marketing is, unlike a job with finite financial guarantees, an unlimited revenue stream that ripens and is harvested over time.
Your final note is a good one, and I think the reason that many people jump around to so many different network marketing programs. If only people would go after these programs and invest the time they needed, they'd see that they could make a single one work instead of constantly trying to find "the one."
Posted by: click here | November 24, 2009 at 12:41 PM