I guess the point I was trying to make... Let'
Post# of 32642
Let's say that Vlad really did like guitars.
Now Vlad has a company in mind that is struggling with sales and he wants to approach them to see if they would be interested in selling more guitars. We already know that Vlad is keen on the idea, and if it worked like he thinks it will, there may be 10 other small companies that he would like to approach to sell their guitars too. Now here's where he may run into problems. These companies are too small to have a marketing department and may be intimidated by the idea of an affiliate/attribution program, "what the hell is an affiliate program?" "wtf is verbTEAMS?" "how do you set up something like that? They might be active on social media, but might not be into marketing, but they do follow his youtube channel and like him because of his business savvy...
Does verbTEAMS have all the tools Vlad would need to make this happen without having to sell them on learning a marketing platform and subscribe to it too? I don't think so but I might be wrong. Vlad will be responsible for making sure everyone will get their proper commission from sales they helped to make happen. Who will have to pay them? Vlad, or the guitar company? Is there a generic agreement that could be used and provided by Verb? What back-offices will Vlad need for this to happen, and has Verb developed one and decided on a price for them to add to his subscription? Do you see where I'm going with this?
These small companies may like selling guitars but learning a marketing program could be a brand new idea to them and may rather just sign on the dotted line. Are all influencers aware of how Verb can make this happen for them?
Either way, I think this is something that would be extremely appealing to thousands of influencers that have only been thinking about growing a following on Facebook for the benefit of some large enterprise MLM client.
The thought of using the attribution feature to acquire just a handful of large "influencers" is probably a thousand times easier than creating a new brand and trying to acquire thousands of "distributors". If Vlad really did want to sell guitars, he would have No trouble finding a few large influencers that would gladly participate by sharing his livestream to their guitar fans.
Think not only natural hair and coffee products, but music lessons, many types of guitars, amps, saxophones, organs, drums, boats, airplanes and thousands of other products that are ripe for the picking by passionate influencers already in every category.
This idea could also be exploited by Verb in their marketing efforts, if the program is set up properly. I hope it already is, but if not, I don't think they would have a problem adding just a couple of things that could also be charged for.
Sorry for the long post...