FWIW I've had a number of people try to convince me to sign up for Success University -- I guess I make a juicy prospect for someone's downline. But after perusing the site, I wasn't sure what to make of it. I never bothered signing up for it, since I already have stacks of PD products to evaluate, so more input isn't something I need right now.
About a year ago, ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ had the highest Alexa ranking of any PD site on the web as far as I could tell. Last year StevePavlina.com passed it (it's hard to compete with FREE), and since May 2006 it appears their web traffic has been steadily declining. They're still getting a significant amount of traffic though, perhaps on par with a top 500 blog.
I also got a phone call from someone in SU's management a few months ago, but after playing phone tag a couple times, he gave up and never called me back again. I would have been happy to speak to him to get a better sense of their site/service, since I'm always on the lookout for things to recommend. I'm really, really picky about what I'll recommend though.
With the right product or service, MLM acts like an extended affiliate program. When the product or service is garbage or hugely overpriced, MLM devolves into more of a pyramid scheme. So far I haven't formed an opinion on SU because I've never tried it -- to adequately test such a service would probably take more time than I'm able to invest.
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