What is the different titles in MonaVies compensation plan?
Posted on June 2nd, 2010 by admin
How does the MonaVie compensation plan work and what are the different titles you can get in MonaVie as a distributor?
What are the names of the big dogs in MonaVie?
The compensation plan works on volume totaled on each of your legs. You are paid 10% of the volume of your lesser leg (whichever leg has less people). Your "rank" is determined by how much volume is on your lesser leg. Each case of MonaVie that people under you order is equivalent to 100 points in volume (GV). The ranks are:
- Distributor – Has not signed up a person on each leg yet
- Star – Rank you achieve when you sign up 2 people
- Star 500 – Has 500 GV (5 cases) on your lesser leg
- Star 1000 – Has 1000 GV (10 cases) on your lesser leg
- Bronze – Has 2,000 GV (20 cases) on your lesser leg
- Silver – Has 3,000 GV (30 cases) on your lesser leg
- Gold – Has 5,000 GV (50 cases) on your lesser leg
- Ruby – Has 10,000 GV on your lesser leg
- Emerald – Has 15,000 GV on your lesser leg
- Diamond – Has 20,000 GV on your lesser leg
- Blue Diamond – Has 25,000 GV on your lesser leg
- Hawaiian Blue Diamond – Has 75,000 GV on lesser leg
- Black Diamond – Has 150,000 GV on lesser leg
The list continues further up, but those are the basic ranks. Here is where you can see the income potential for each rank:
http://media.monavie.com/pdf/corporate/income_disclosure_statement.pdf
Some of the big dogs in the company are:
Jill and Kelly Bangert
Mark and Tami Crawford
Brig and Lita Hart
Angel and Sandra Matos
Gina and Steve Merritt
Scott and Sue Olsen
Ken and Carol Porter
Corbin and Holly Roush
Randy and Tara Schroeder
Darrell and Tracy Utterbach
Laurie and Orrin Woodward
Daniel Kleinman creates one of the most nuanced layered sequences in the series for the action adventure thriller GoldenEye (1995), starring Pierce Brosnan in his first outing as James Bond. With the franchise returning after a seven year hiatus and many questioning 007’s purpose, the film addresses the issue head on by reflecting the new geopolitical structure of a post Cold War world, with the focus being on broken and fractured Communist Russian imagery and the dangers therein. This inevitably caused controversy at the time of the film’s Russian release. The song, a favourite among Bond fans, is performed by Tina Turner and was written by Bono and The Edge, though sadly it does not feature throughout the film’s score. No copyright infringement intended. To be removed at the behest of the distributor.
The Prisoner opening titles
Crossroads ATV 70s with Meg, Sandy & Benny at the action packed midlands motel
by saul bass