          
          
          
          
          
                   HOW TO EARN LIFETIME RESIDUAL INCOME 
                        FROM LONG DISTANCE SERVICES
          
          
               Long distance reselling is a new industry that can
          create both immediate income and a lifetime residual
          income, but you have to enter the field with caution. 
          It is a 60 billion dollar per year industry, with over
          20 million business customers and 95 million households
          as a potential market for services. 
               Long distance service is the ideal product --
          something that everyone already buys again and again,
          month after month.  The service you will offer is like
          giving money to your customers, and there is no charge
          for your service.  You don't have to ask your customers
          for money.
               There are a number of the companies in this
          business who have been advertising business
          opportunities.  Some are real bad deals.  One multi-
          level plan pays you $3 for each person signed up, and
          paints a lovely picture of how much that could add up
          to after your network of distributors brings in
          thousands of customers.  They give you $3 and they get
          a lifetime customer!  Another charges a $10,000
          franchise fee for the privilege of selling their
          services.  Whether or not they'll be in business after
          they sell the franchises is another question.  Yet
          another wants $1,000 for the privilege of selling their
          prepaid telephone credit card, another $1,000 if you'd
          also like to sell their payphone service, etc., etc. 
          Yet another looks good on the surface, as a multi-level
          program, but it depends upon your remaining a customer
          of their service.  So if you move in with someone and
          don't have a telephone billed in your name for awhile,
          you forfeit the entire distributor organization and
          commissions you have built up -- and the same thing
          happens if you pay your telephone bill late.   But once
          you get through the hype and the junk, it turns out
          that you really can make a very good income as a long
          distance reseller.
               Every once in a while. a really "big" opportunity
          comes along.  This is such an opportunity.  It is not
          multi-level, although you can have directly recruited
          representatives working for you in one of the two
          options available to you.
               You get a commission, a percentage of all the
          long-distance telephone calls made by every customer
          you sign up for this service.  But that's only the
          beginning, because you get passive, residual income
          too.  Just like a movie actor who works one time,
          making the movie, but gets paid every time it's shown
          or every time a video of it is sold.  That's "residual
          income" -- the secret to a large income.
               In the telecommunications business, you keep
          getting commissions for life, on every customer you
          sign up for the service.  Do that "work" once, and get
          paid forever.  This lets you stack up income, so that,
          after a year or a few years, you have big money coming
          in every month even if you do no work.
               Your customers can save up to 30% on their monthly
          long-distance bill, savings that not even MCI, Sprint,
          or other cut-rate companies can offer.  And while
          they're enjoying these cheap rates, they get all the
          high-class benefits of AT&T.
               Major corporations pay a lot less for their long-
          distance service than most customers.  This all changed
          with a new legal ruling by the Federal Communications
          Commission (FCC), the government regulator of the
          telecommunications industry.  AT&T, the FCC decided,
          must treat all of its customers equally.  AT&T is now
          required to give discounts not just to corporate giants
          but to any resale company that can purchase long-
          distance services in the same high volume as corporate
          users.
          
          
          
          
