3. Q. When a cardholder saves $30 on their hotel rate, $15 is my "commission" for the use
of the card. Where does that “commission” originate? In other words, who pays for
that? Who paid the $15 to me?
A. All hotels pay commissions to generate bookings. As a member of the groupthink
organization Quora, I found this article about Online Travel Organization and booking
engines like Orbitz, Priceline, Hotels.com, TripAdvisor, and others. So instead of the
hotel paying 30% or more, customers book through GoodLife USA -- who passes most
of the commission to us.
Q. What is the fastest way to get paid when distributing this Card?
A. Locate customers already headed to a hotel to pay $100/night. After taking 30
seconds to activate the Card online, they rebook for $70/night and save $30/night. After
confirmation, cancel their first reservation. You get $15/night. (Uber or Lyft drivers work
the best!)
4. Q. Where should I focus on the best rate of reward to effort invested?
A. Organize distributors wherever travelers congregate: near beaches (bartenders,
waiters, and excursion guides) or hotels (bellmen, valets, shoe shiners, masseuses,
and concierges). The best should be drivers (for Uber, Lyft, cab services, or executive
services with town cars and limos) or airport personnel (airport personnel inside the
security zone at magazine, phone, and sunglass stands).
Q. How can VIP Cards benefit non-profit organizations?
A. Non-profits (whether they be religious or philanthropic) can become their own
distribution center, purchasing and then giving away VIP Cards to members of their
church, organization, or community. When each member takes advantage of the
guaranteed hotel discounts, the organization earns the $100 commission per $200 in
savings! Imagine 1,000 cards given out to members of a congregation. When each
saves $200 during their business or vacation traveling, $100,000 is received by the
church!
5. Q. Say I connect to the owner of a business convention. Why not let them become a
distributor that gives away 10k cards to their attendees. What would I earn in this
scenario?
A. For every $100 paid on $200 card savings, you earn $25
Q. What if a hotel owner gives away VIP cards as a gift to every business traveler on
check-out?
A. Your hotel owner would earn $100 from each card fully used, regardless of which
hotel the patron stays at!! No other method allows them to profit once their patrons exit
their hotel!
Q. If my hotel owner gets paid $100 per $200 in hotel savings, how much would I make?
A. For enrolling a distributor, your compensation is $25 every time they get paid $100!
6. Q. What if I tell a broker he can charge for the cards and keep his fee, while I keep the
$100/card?
A. Each operator is independent and can choose how to market GoodLife’s product.
You’re at-risk if your distributor does his research online and locates another distributor
offering $100/$200 in savings.
Q. How quickly do I get paid?
A. Allow 45 days. After the cardholder saves $200, the $100 commission processes
from the hotel through the hotel discount aggregator’s accounting cycle and then catch
the pay-cycle from GoodLife USA.However, you do not have to wait for the entire $200
to be used up. Commissions are paid pro rata.
7. Q. So is the objective just getting the cards into the hands of high-probability hotel
users?
A. Yes. If you just put Cards in the hands of people in general, your utilization rate is
unknown. If you put them in the hands of business people that travel already, your
unknown changes from "if" to "when." If you put them in the hands of a traveler
(business or recreational), helping them save immediately, your turnaround in payment
shortens considerably!
Q. When do I can get paid from a VIP hotel card if the cardholder does not use $200 in
discounts immediately?
A. The $100/$200 in hotel savings is paid prorated. That means that you get paid after
the discount is used.
Example, a cardholder saves $50 on a 1-night stay but does not use the card again for
a year. You would receive $25 in about 45 days.
8. Q. What happens when the card runs out?
A. Cardholders register online via their name and unique email. When the card runs
out, GoodLife offers them a choice of membership subscriptions: Silver ($19/m), Gold
($39/m) and Platinum ($59/m).
Q. Do I pay hotel taxes on their retail posted rate?
A. Hotel taxes are charged on the VIP Card’s discounted rate.
Q. When I activate a card, am I going to get spammed after I give my email address?
A. GoodLife has a strict policy against spamming.
9.
10. Q. How much does each card cost?
A. $0.20/card, but volume discounts
apply.
Q. How does co-branding work?
A. Co-branding places your logo on
the card with GoodLife.
Q. What if I dispense 1,000,000
cards per month to travelers, at a
1% utilization rate (meaning that
only 10,000 of the cardholders save
$200 on their hotel stays), how
much could I earn?
A. 10,000 cards saving $200 each x
$100 = $1 million
11. Q. What if I can only distribute
1,000 cards per month to
vacationers or business travelers
and all use the $200 savings
immediately (100% utilization), how
much could I earn?
A. 1,000 cards saving $200 each x
$100 = $100,000
Q. How do I activate a card if I’ve
been given the 7-digit code # from
an actual card?
A. http://vip.goodlifeusa.com/ and
follow the directions.
12.
13. Here's a demo of how we combined an offer for vacations
with the incentive of the GoodLife VIP Club Card
How does this work?
Your $200 Goodlife USA V.I.P. Club Card is registered to the distributor who shared it with you.
You get to take a test drive of the GoodLife USA service, receiving $200 worth of hotel savings! GUARANTEED!!
The distributor earns a commission of 50% of your savings.
In other words, if Joe gives a card to Susan, and she receives $100 worth of saving using the card, Joe receives $50. If Susan uses the entire $200 in savings, Joe receives $100. Simple and profitable.