Zija Scam
With so many MLM companies selling various health drinks it's hard to tell which are legit and which are scams. I've been pitched on Monavie, Jusuru, Xango, and umpteen others and now Zija. Thought I would just post my impressions:
Zija Scam?
Zija sells a "smart drink" based on the Moringa fruit. I didn't even know there was such a thing as a Moringa fruit. Where do they keep finding these new ones? I wonder if it's like Olive Garden where they just make up new random names for foods that sort of sound Italian, but never really existed - Spagettacholi, Ravietti, Linguisaroni, think of a random name and they'll probably use it. The only thing I eat at Olive Garden is salad and breadsticks, and that's sort of how I feel about juices made from fruit names that sound like they came from a marketing department instead of the rain forest or under whatever bush they claim they found it under.
I've heard of a Morinda fruit, but not a Moringa. Neither one sounds particularly appealing.
Zija comes in a 5.5 ounce can, and there's a dry mix that comes in a packet that can be mixed with water. So far, nothing out of the ordinary. Where it goes sideways is where I start seeing claims of weight loss and health benefits. Any time I see a product with testimonials where people say they have gone off their meds since using it, I think SCAM. Because right underneath all the claims, there's always the fine print that says something like "Not approved by the FDA for the treatment of anything. ( Including Thirst )."
Zija Scam Income Claims
I also get worried when a company compensation plan has lots of minerally sounding levels of commission levels:
Distributor
Builder
Builder 500
Builder 1000
Bronze
Silver
Gold
Platinum
Emerald
Diamond
Double Diamond
Triple Diamond
Diamond Elite
And...multiple confusing layers of payout that remind me of the payout chart on a slot machine in Vegas. "if you get two bars and a cherry, you qualify for 8 new levels of commission!!!!"
Come on. How about a simple comp plan with a simple commission that you can understand?
I guess while Zija might not be a "scam", there's really nothing about it that would make me want to just stop buying overpriced pomegranate juice at the supermarket. At least I don't have to stock six months worth in my garage.