DIRECT
SALES AN OVERVIEW
Keith B. Laggos Ph.D., M.B.A., M.A., B.A.
The First Comprehensive
College Textbook Series on the Direct Sales Industry
CHAPTER SIX
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THE LEGAL ENVIRONMENT
By Jeffrey Babener© |
Key Points of the Chapter
- The legal history of direct selling and the Direct Sales Industry has been characterized
by cycles in which the legal climate has vacillated between challenge and support.
In 1998 the legal climate is generally positive.
- The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) established the earliest guidelines regarding illegal
Pyramid Schemes and other unlawful entrepreneurial chains.
- The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) demonstrated that securities statutes also
apply to the Industry.
- The FTC's prosecution of Amway in the mid-1970s resulted in the 1979 landmark ruling
referred to as the "Amway Safeguards Rule," one of the most significant sets of
legal standards by which courts and regulatory agencies determine the legitimacy of a
Direct Sales company.
- The basic thrust of existing statutes regulating the Industry is that Direct Sales
companies must be bona fide sales organizations which market bona fide
Product to consumers.
- In addition to legal regulation, Industry association Codes of Ethics provide a
framework for Industry self-regulation.
- Legislation and the legal environment are ultimately strengthening the Industry and
helping create greater acceptance by legal authorities, the media, the public, and other
business communities.
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