Posted by Jared Spil on October 03, 19102 at 16:50:45:
In Reply to: Re: Please be advised posted by Then why not just be honest when recruiting on September 02, 19102 at 09:45:34:
This is in response to everything that is being said about Scentura Creations. First, I owned an office for nearly four weeks in 2000, and, while I do not believe that more than four people in the entire company are making six figures, the fact remains that there are two very good reasons why Scentura will stay in business. The first is an opinion of mine. Some may disagree, but in my economically educated opinion, perfume and cologne is really damn expensive and Scentura's versions are pretty damn cheap. Coupled with the fact that wearing cologne or perfume is not like trying to fashion the "Tommy Sports" knockoff sweatshirtin that nobody is going to know what the bottle on your mantle says or doesn't say, and you have a market. Who is this market?
I am glad everyone wants to know. Its the biggest group of people on Earth. Poor people! There are poor people in every country in the fucking world, and America isn't any different, with the possible point that the US lets poor people from other countries emmigrate. These people don't give a rats ass about the ethics involved in buying of the street, but they do want to smell good for under $60. The second reason why Scentura will continue to operate has to do with the Neo-American idea that everyone has to go to college and sit at a desk for $50000 per year. It isn't happening. College is a weeding out process, nowadays, and when the Universities send them home after they have used up their two trips to health center for alcohol poisoning, and they can't even tell you what time their English class starts, pyramid scams take your little babies by the hand. What do they say? "people that work nine to five are dead". That is believable to anyone that has seen the movie "Office Space". Plus, and I know you don't want to hear it, but the idea of doing actual work is completely foreign to anyone who has graduated high school and tried college since 1992. Why? Simply put, people in America are judged not by how much they know but how much they have. If you look at a sample of people that arrive in an average Scentura office, you would probably find 15% ex- military, 20% recent layoffs(that might be higher now), 40% kids taking a "year off" from college, and 25% decent looking people that have never had much of a chance in life. In six months of working at a heavily populated office, I went through it all, let me tell you. In the end, I don't know why i quit, but I know that I wanted to. I regretted it for a while, because I had so much fun just hanging out with different people from everywhere you could imagine. Although I will never sell this product again, if I had 5o bucks and no cologne, I would probably call my ex-employers so I would have bar money. Moreover, I would rate my work ethich higher now than I would have ever imagined, which is tough to put a price on. I guess I was good at selling and I did make pretty good money in the training, but the reason I wanted it so desperately was to prove people wrong. I think that I did.
PS to Aquarius MCFEB14 If you are out there, I am sorry for everything
include('/var/www/html/seniors-site.com/www/scripts/bot.php'); ?>