Direct Selling Association
The Direct Selling Association (DSA) is a national trade association founded in 1910 as the Agents Credit Association in Binghamton, New York, representing nearly 130 companies that market consumer goods and services directly to individuals through independent sales representatives in the United States.[1] DSA's mission centers on protecting, serving, and promoting the direct selling industry by advancing ethical standards, providing education and research to members, and advocating with policymakers to safeguard flexible business opportunities for independent sellers.[1] Central to its self-regulation is the DSA Code of Ethics, which members annually reaffirm and which explicitly prohibits pyramid or endless chain schemes, emphasizing compensation based on verifiable product sales to ultimate users rather than recruitment.[2][3] The association conducts random compliance reviews of 20% of members yearly and collaborates with government agencies to distinguish legitimate direct selling from illegal operations.[1] In 2024, the U.S. direct selling channel it represents achieved $34.7 billion in retail sales, serving 34.3 million customers through approximately 5.4 million independent sellers, though the model has drawn scrutiny for high participant attrition and limited earnings for most, prompting ongoing debates over its economic viability despite regulatory defenses.[4]Overview
Mission and Activities
The Direct Selling Association (DSA) states its mission as protecting, serving, and promoting the effectiveness of its member companies and the independent business people they represent, while ensuring that the marketing of products and direct selling opportunities adheres to the highest standards of business ethics and customer service.[1] This dual focus aims to sustain direct selling as a viable distribution channel amid regulatory and competitive pressures.[1] DSA's core activities encompass advocacy, self-regulation, education, and industry support. In advocacy, the organization collaborates with the U.S. Congress, federal agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission, and consumer protection groups to influence policies favorable to direct selling, including defenses against mischaracterizations as pyramid schemes and support for anti-pyramid legislation.[5] [6] It maintains programs like grassroots advocacy training for member companies, a bipartisan Direct Selling Caucus in Congress, and legislative status updates to mobilize members on key issues.[7] Self-regulation forms a cornerstone of DSA's operations, enforced through a mandatory Code of Ethics that requires member companies to uphold ethical sales practices, provide accurate income disclosures, and resolve consumer disputes via arbitration or mediation.[2] The association conducts compliance reviews of approximately 20% of its nearly 130 member companies annually, policing marketing and sales practices to preempt regulatory intervention and distinguish legitimate direct selling from illegal schemes.[1] Educational initiatives include professional development programs, such as the Direct Selling Compliance Professional (DSCP) recertification courses and executive education for sales, marketing, and field leadership roles, alongside seminars like the annual Legal + Regulatory Seminar held December 9-11, 2025.[5] DSA also hosts events for networking and recognition, including bi-monthly member updates, board meetings, and awards ceremonies honoring innovations in technology, advocacy, and community impact, as seen in the 2025 awards announced September 16, 2025.[8] Additionally, it produces industry research and fact sheets to provide data-driven insights on market trends and economic contributions.[1]Organizational Structure and Membership
The Direct Selling Association (DSA) operates as a national trade association governed by a Board of Directors comprising executives from member companies. The Board elects officers, including a Chairman, Vice Chairmen, Treasurer, and Immediate Past Chairman, who provide strategic oversight and leadership. As of 2025, the Chairman is Andrew Schmidt of Amway, Vice Chairmen are Paulo Moledo of Hy Cite Enterprises and Nevena Srebreva of Pampered Chef, Treasurer is David R. Merriman of ACN, and Immediate Past Chairman is Danny Lee of 4Life; the DSA President is David F. Grimaldi.[9] The Board also includes directors from companies such as USANA Health Sciences, Omnilife USA, Plexus Worldwide, and Herbalife, reflecting representation across the direct selling sector.[9] DSA maintains various committees to support operations, including member services chaired by a director from Plexus Worldwide, focusing on compliance, education, and industry advocacy. The association's structure emphasizes self-regulation, with mechanisms like annual random reviews of 20% of members to enforce the Code of Ethics.[1] Membership is limited to direct selling companies that apply and commit annually to the DSA Code of Ethics, undergoing a rigorous review process. Applicants are designated as "pending members" for at least one full year, during which DSA evaluates their adherence to ethical standards, legal compliance, and consumer protection practices before granting active status.[10] Active membership requires ongoing recommitment to the Code and participation in self-regulatory initiatives.[1] DSA categorizes members into types such as active direct selling companies, pending applicants, suppliers, supplier exhibitors, affinity partners, global associates, and subscribers, allowing broader industry participation while prioritizing core direct sellers. As of recent reports, DSA represents nearly 130 active member companies.[1] These members gain access to education, research, networking, and advocacy resources, with eligibility for individuals tied to prior involvement in direct selling firms.[11]History
Founding and Early Development
The Direct Selling Association traces its origins to 1910, when it was established in Binghamton, New York, as the Agents Credit Association by representatives from ten direct selling companies, including the California Perfume Company (predecessor to Avon).[12][1] The founding aimed to address practical challenges faced by door-to-door sales agents, particularly difficulties in collecting payments from customers, while promoting ethical business practices among members engaged in personal selling of consumer goods.[1][12] This marked the first organized trade group specifically for direct sellers in the United States, reflecting the growing prevalence of in-home and door-to-door distribution models amid limited retail infrastructure.[12] In 1914, the organization reorganized and adopted the name National Association of Agency Companies to broaden its scope beyond credit issues.[12] It briefly expanded to include mail-order firms as the National Association of Agency and Mail Order Companies between 1917 and 1920 before reverting to its prior name, signaling an early focus on defining the core direct selling channel distinct from other sales methods.[12] By the mid-1920s, membership had expanded to nearly 50 companies, incorporating firms like Electrolux and Fuller Brush that relied on door-to-door sales, and the association issued a formal statement emphasizing fair dealing and ethical conduct to counter public skepticism toward itinerant sellers.[12] A significant reorganization occurred in 1925, when it was renamed the National Association of Direct Selling Companies, dividing members into Active (80 companies directly involved in selling) and Associate (11 supporting firms) categories under President Frank B. Jennings, who prioritized ethical standards.[12] During the 1930s, the association adapted to regulatory shifts from the New Deal era, such as minimum wage laws, by supporting transitions to independent contractor models—as exemplified by Avon's restructuring of its sales force—to maintain flexibility in direct selling operations.[12] Innovations like Norman Squires' conceptualization of the party plan sales model in the late 1930s for Stanley Home Products further diversified tactics, laying groundwork for in-home demonstrations that would gain prominence post-World War II.[12]Post-War Expansion and Name Change
Following World War II, the association, then known as the National Association of Direct Selling Companies (NADSC), was officially incorporated under Minnesota laws in 1946, formalizing its structure amid a burgeoning industry.[12] The direct selling sector experienced dramatic expansion during the 1950s, driven by postwar economic prosperity, suburbanization, and rising consumer demand for household goods, which spurred the formation of major companies and increased the need for industry representation.[12] In 1951, the association launched its first public relations program in partnership with Banner & Greif to enhance its visibility and counter regulatory challenges, such as the U.S. Supreme Court's upholding of Green River Ordinances restricting door-to-door sales in Breard v. Alexandria.[12] By the late 1960s, as the industry continued to grow with innovations like Mary Kay Cosmetics' launch in 1963, the association sought to strengthen its advocacy role.[12] In December 1968, J. Robert Brouse was appointed president, initiating preparations for relocation from Chicago to Washington, D.C., to facilitate closer engagement with federal policymakers.[13] [12] In June 1969, during its 55th annual meeting, the board amended the bylaws to rename the organization the Direct Selling Association (DSA), reflecting a sharpened focus on direct selling distinct from broader agency or mail-order models, and completed the headquarters move to Washington, D.C.[12] [13] This rebranding and strategic repositioning marked a pivotal evolution, enabling enhanced self-regulation and lobbying amid increasing scrutiny of sales practices.[12]Modern Era and Global Ties
In the 1980s, the DSA navigated economic challenges while advocating for key legislative protections, culminating in the 1982 Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act, which granted direct sellers "statutory nonemployee" status, exempting them from certain payroll taxes after a decade of lobbying efforts.[12] This period also saw the emergence of major companies like Herbalife in 1980, contributing to industry growth amid broader post-war expansion into multilevel marketing models. By the early 1990s, the DSA strengthened self-regulation through amendments to its Code of Ethics in 1992, mandating a 90% inventory buyback policy and cooling-off periods for recruits to mitigate pyramid scheme risks, effective January 1, 1993.[12] The 2000s marked a focus on compliance and public perception, with the DSA's 2004 Model Anti-Pyramid Scheme Legislation adopted by South Dakota and six other states, providing a framework to distinguish legitimate direct selling from illegal schemes.[12] In 2006, the association launched an Image Enhancement campaign that generated over 600 positive media stories in its first year, countering negative stereotypes.[12] The 2010 centennial celebration highlighted the industry's evolution, followed by successful opposition to 2009 California proposals that would have withheld taxes on independent contractors, preserving cash flow for sellers. Modern adaptations include a shift toward digital tools and social media since the 2010s, enabling virtual parties and online recruitment, which accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic to sustain $34.7 billion in U.S. retail sales through 2024.[14] Globally, the DSA maintains strong ties through its membership in the World Federation of Direct Selling Associations (WFDSA), a nongovernmental body representing 59 national direct selling associations worldwide, for which the DSA serves as secretariat.[15] This role facilitates collaboration on ethical standards, including support for the WFDSA World Code, adapted by members to local laws, and joint advocacy on regulatory issues.[15] The DSA also partners with regional groups like SELDIA, the Federation of European Direct Selling Associations, which represents 23 EU-based associations and emphasizes direct selling's economic contributions across 39 countries.[15] These connections enable information sharing via the DSA International Council on global challenges, contributing to WFDSA-reported worldwide retail sales of $186.1 billion in 2021.[16][17]Standards and Self-Regulation
Code of Ethics and Compliance
The Direct Selling Association's Code of Ethics, enacted in 1970, establishes standards for member companies to ensure fair treatment of consumers and independent salespeople through personal-contact distribution methods.[2][18] It prohibits deceptive, unlawful, or unethical practices in sales and recruiting, requiring accurate representations of products, services, earnings potential, and compensation plans, while mandating timely order fulfillment and clear identification of salespeople.[18] Member companies must provide written orders, a minimum three-day cooling-off period for refunds or cancellations, and repurchase at least 90% of unused, marketable inventory from terminating salespeople within 12 months at net cost, excluding shipping and handling.[18] Key obligations include banning inventory loading—defined as requiring excessive purchases beyond immediate sales needs—and limiting entry fees or training costs to reasonable amounts not exceeding $100 unless justified by tangible value.[18] Companies must also publicize the Code via their websites, provide training on ethical marketing, appoint a designated Code Responsibility Officer, and establish internal complaint resolution procedures.[18] The Code explicitly proscribes pyramid schemes, where recruitment rather than product sales drives compensation, and requires documentation to substantiate any earnings or lifestyle claims.[18] Enforcement is handled by an independent Code Administrator appointed by the DSA Board, who investigates bona fide complaints from consumers, salespeople, or others, determines violations, and mandates remedies such as refunds, corrective advertising, or fines up to $1,000 per violation.[18] Member cooperation is mandatory during probes, with an Appeals Review Panel available for disputes; non-compliance can result in suspension (minimum 90 days) or termination of membership, barring reinstatement for one year in the latter case.[18] Annual compliance reports detail enforcement actions, though listing an issue does not confirm a violation.[19] To bolster self-regulation, the DSA established the Direct Selling Self-Regulatory Council (DSSRC) in 2019, an autonomous body funded by the DSA but administered by BBB National Programs, focusing on monitoring and resolving advertising claims including product efficacy, income representations, and lifestyle assertions.[20][21] The DSSRC reviews inquiries proactively or via challenges, requiring companies to modify or withdraw unsubstantiated claims, with decisions publicized for transparency and appeals available.[20] Complementing this, the DSA offers a Direct Selling Compliance Professional Certification Program to train personnel on policy development, best practices, and regulatory adherence.[22]Education Initiatives and Consumer Protection
The Direct Selling Education Foundation (DSEF), affiliated with the Direct Selling Association (DSA), conducts academic research partnerships to examine direct selling's economic contributions, such as a 2024 report estimating its annual impact at $111 billion to the U.S. economy through sales, income, and taxes.[23] DSEF also publishes educational resources, including the book "Direct Selling: A Global and Social Business Model," with proceeds funding further initiatives to equip educators with curricula on direct selling as a legitimate business model.[23] These efforts aim to foster accurate academic understanding, countering misconceptions by highlighting skills development benefits, where over 75% of participants report improvements in business acumen and personal competencies.[24] DSA provides professional education through programs like the Direct Selling Compliance Professional (DSCP) Certification, a multi-module course covering claims substantiation, income representations, product claims, social media monitoring, and salesforce training to prevent misleading marketing.[22] Offered periodically, such as sessions in October 2024 and recertification in October 2025, the DSCP equips compliance officers with tools for policy development and regulatory adherence, enhancing industry standards at a cost of $299 for DSA members.[22][5] Additional resources include On-the-Go Learning webinars and the annual Legal + Regulatory Seminar, scheduled for December 9-11, 2025, targeting executives on ethical practices and oversight.[5] Consumer protection is enforced via the DSA Code of Ethics, established in 1970, which mandates member companies to avoid misleading statements, provide truthful product and compensation information, and offer a three-day sales withdrawal period with full refunds, alongside repurchase of unused inventory at 90% of original cost within 12 months.[2] An independent Code Administrator investigates complaints, requiring remedies like refunds or corrective actions, with submissions processed through a dedicated form.[2] Complementing this, the Direct Selling Self-Regulatory Council (DSSRC), launched in 2019 and funded by DSA but operating autonomously, monitors advertising claims, resolves disputes via an impartial challenge process, and publishes annual activity reports detailing case outcomes to promote transparency.[20] These initiatives integrate education with self-regulation; for instance, DSEF's ethics program reinforces the Code by training on honest representations, while DSCP modules directly support consumer safeguards by emphasizing substantiation of claims and ethical sales training.[25] DSA collaborates with government agencies and consumer organizations to uphold these standards, positioning self-regulation as a voluntary commitment to accountability beyond legal minimums.[5]Economic Role and Industry Support
Key Statistics and Market Data
In 2023, the United States direct selling industry recorded $36.7 billion in retail sales, a figure derived from independent contractor agreements signed or renewed by 13 million individuals, of whom 6.1 million actively participated as direct sellers.[26] These sellers, averaging $6,016 in annual retail sales per active participant, included approximately 0.5 million full-time (30+ hours per week) and 5.6 million part-time operators.[26] Retail sales in 2024 declined to $34.7 billion, reflecting steady but moderated channel performance amid broader economic pressures.[14] The industry served 37.7 million customers in 2023, comprising 30.8 million preferred customers and 6.9 million discount buyers.[26] Product categories emphasized wellness and services, which together accounted for over 66% of sales:| Category | Share of Sales |
|---|---|
| Services | 33.7% |
| Wellness | 32.4% |
| Home/Family Care/Durables | 16.0% |
| Personal Care | 10.2% |
| Clothing/Accessories | 5.0% |
| Leisure/Educational | 2.7% |
Contributions to Entrepreneurship and Economy
The direct selling industry, as advocated by the Direct Selling Association (DSA), generated $40.5 billion in U.S. retail sales in 2022, yielding a total economic impact of $111.4 billion, which included $31.0 billion in indirect supply chain effects and $39.9 billion in induced household spending effects.[30] This contribution marked a 34% increase in GDP impact from $83.1 billion in 2016, alongside $15.5 billion in tax revenues comprising $9.5 billion federal and $6.0 billion state and local.[30] These figures reflect the industry's role in sustaining consumer demand and labor income circulation, with DSA facilitating standards that underpin such activity through member company compliance and market promotion.[5] In fostering entrepreneurship, direct selling enabled 6.7 million U.S. individuals to operate as independent contractors in 2022, providing a low-barrier model requiring minimal upfront capital, inventory management, or fixed overheads, as companies supply training, marketing tools, and order fulfillment.[30] [31] The demographic profile emphasizes accessibility, with 81.8% of representatives being female, enabling flexible, part-time business ownership often suited to caregivers or those seeking supplemental income without traditional employment constraints.[32] DSA supports this by advocating for independent contractor protections against reclassification threats, as demonstrated in 2024 Capitol Hill engagements where sellers highlighted policy needs for sustained entrepreneurial viability.[33] Through its affiliated Direct Selling Education Foundation (DSEF), DSA advances entrepreneurship via programs like the Direct Selling Entrepreneur Program, which educates participants on business fundamentals, ethical practices, and opportunity recognition, thereby enhancing individual agency and community economic resilience.[34] This initiative aligns with the model's causal structure, where compensation ties directly to sales performance—personal or team-based—promoting skill development and scalable income potential over salaried dependency.[35] Overall, DSA's self-regulatory framework and policy engagement help mitigate risks like non-compliance, ensuring the channel's contributions to entrepreneurial diversity and broader economic multipliers persist amid evolving retail dynamics.[5]Advocacy and Policy Engagement
Lobbying and Political Action
The Direct Selling Association operates the Direct Selling Association Political Action Committee (DSAPAC), registered with the Federal Election Commission since July 11, 1977, as a qualified trade association PAC to fund contributions to federal candidates supportive of direct selling interests.[36] In the 2024 election cycle, DSAPAC contributions totaled $23,545, directed toward incumbents and challengers in both parties who align with policies preserving independent contractor status and regulatory distinctions from unlawful schemes.[37] Historical PAC activity includes targeted support for pro-industry lawmakers, such as independent expenditures exceeding $50,000 on advertisements favoring key politicians ahead of the 2012 elections.[38] Federal lobbying disclosures indicate minimal direct expenditures by the DSA in recent periods, with $0 reported for 2024, reflecting a strategic emphasis on in-house advocacy over hired lobbyists.[37] The association instead prioritizes grassroots mobilization, coordinating member companies and thousands of independent sellers to engage lawmakers directly on legislation affecting the model's viability, such as worker classification and consumer protection rules.[39] A prominent example occurred in September 2025, when DSA-led efforts rallied entrepreneurs to Capitol Hill, securing meetings with over 100 members of Congress and advancing H.R. 3495—the Direct Seller and Real Estate Agent Harmonization Act—through committee with bipartisan support; the bill amends the Fair Labor Standards Act to explicitly exclude direct sellers from employee status, addressing risks from expansive interpretations like those in California’s AB5.[40] Similarly, in 2021, DSA opposed H.R. 842 (PRO Act) by urging opposition to its reclassification provisions, which could impose employer-like obligations on direct selling firms and erode the independent contractor framework central to the industry's 6.5 million U.S. participants.[41] The DSA also bolsters these efforts through the bipartisan Direct Selling Caucus, launched in 2015 by Representatives Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and Marc Veasey (D-TX), which facilitates legislative introductions and hearings to counter mischaracterizations of legitimate direct selling as pyramid schemes and to advocate for tailored regulations.[42] At the state level, DSA has mobilized against bills like Delaware's HB 162 in 2025, which passed the House but targeted recruitment practices in ways DSA argued threatened compliant businesses without addressing fraud.[43] This decentralized approach amplifies the voices of distributed sellers, yielding influence disproportionate to formal spending while focusing on empirical defenses of the model's economic contributions over $40 billion annually in U.S. retail sales.[5]Positions on Regulation and Legislation
The Direct Selling Association (DSA) advocates for regulatory frameworks that clearly differentiate legitimate direct selling enterprises from illegal pyramid schemes, emphasizing consumer protection through precise legal distinctions rather than broad prohibitions. In its policy priorities, the DSA supports "legislative and regulatory actions that distinguish direct selling companies from pyramid schemes" and aims to "help stakeholders differentiate between legitimate direct selling companies and illegal pyramid schemes to protect consumers."[39] This stance aligns with the association's promotion of industry self-regulation via the Direct Selling Self-Regulatory Council (DSSRC), which enforces standards for truthful advertising and earnings claims, as an alternative to expansive government oversight.[39] On independent contractor classification, the DSA prioritizes federal and state laws affirming direct sellers' status as independent business owners, opposing reclassifications that could impose employee-like obligations. The association strongly backs H.R. 3495, the Direct Seller and Real Estate Agent Harmonization Act, introduced in the 119th Congress, which seeks to amend the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) to harmonize it with longstanding Internal Revenue Service (IRS) recognition of direct sellers as independent contractors since 1982.[44] DSA arguments highlight that the bill would safeguard small business pathways for approximately 5 million active direct sellers, underpinning $34.7 billion in annual retail sales and a $111 billion economic impact, while mitigating litigation risks from conflicting state and federal rules.[44] In September 2025, DSA delegates lobbied over 100 legislators and Trump Administration officials during Direct Selling Day in Washington, D.C., to advance the measure through committees led by figures like Rep. Tim Walberg.[44] Regarding Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regulations, the DSA engages collaboratively but resists rules perceived as overly burdensome on the industry, such as proposed amendments to the Business Opportunity Rule and a new Earnings Claim Rule. The association has analyzed FTC proposals, advocating for exemptions for direct sellers and emphasizing enforcement under existing Section 5 authority of the FTC Act against deceptive practices rather than new prescriptive requirements for income substantiation.[45] In response to the FTC's January 2025 Earnings Claim Rule proposal—which would mandate three-year recordkeeping for claim substantiation and prohibit misleading representations—the DSA planned to mobilize public comments from industry participants to influence the rulemaking process.[46] DSA policy calls for FTC adherence to "appropriate guardrails" before pursuing monetary remedies in enforcement actions.[39] At the state level, the DSA opposes legislation targeting direct selling models, such as Delaware's H.B. 162 passed by the House in June 2025, which the association deemed "an unprecedented threat" due to its potential to disrupt flexible business operations and income opportunities for sellers.[43] Overall, DSA positions favor balanced regulation that fosters industry growth—citing 16 million participants and $35 billion in sales as of recent data—while prioritizing self-policing and targeted enforcement over uniform mandates that could conflate compliant firms with fraudulent schemes.[39]Controversies
Associations with Multi-Level Marketing Criticisms
The Direct Selling Association (DSA) has been criticized for advocating on behalf of multi-level marketing (MLM) companies that prioritize recruitment incentives over genuine product sales, leading to structures resembling illegal pyramid schemes where participant earnings depend primarily on downline recruitment rather than retail transactions.[47] Critics, including consumer protection advocates and legal scholars, argue that DSA's defense of such models perpetuates high financial losses for the vast majority of participants, with data from MLM income disclosure statements analyzed by independent researchers showing that approximately 99% of participants either lose money or earn less than minimum wage after expenses.[48][47] This pattern holds across multiple DSA member firms, where average annual earnings for active distributors often fall below $1,000, underscoring a reliance on continuous influx of new recruits to sustain upper-tier commissions.[47] A foundational association stems from the 1979 FTC v. Amway case, where the DSA supported Amway's defense, resulting in a ruling that exempted the company from pyramid scheme classification due to its "70% rule" requiring distributors to sell at least 70% of purchased goods to non-participants before further recruitment bonuses.[47] Detractors contend this precedent, still cited by DSA in policy advocacy, has enabled MLMs to evade stricter scrutiny by nominally emphasizing retail sales while in practice fostering unlimited recruitment chains that collapse under their own mathematics, as each level requires exponentially more recruits to maintain profitability for those at the top.[47] The FTC has since highlighted ongoing risks in MLM models, including deceptive income representations and pyramid-like emphasis on recruitment, areas where DSA self-regulation via its Code of Ethics is viewed by skeptics as insufficient to curb abuses among members.[49] DSA's lobbying efforts have drawn particular ire for opposing enhanced consumer protections, such as expansions to the FTC's Business Opportunity Rule, which critics say would mandate clearer income disclosures to counter misleading recruitment pitches.[50] In 2006, DSA-influenced legislation in Utah created a "safe harbor" exemption for MLMs from state pyramid laws if they met minimal retail criteria, a move decried as diluting enforcement and prioritizing industry interests over participant safeguards.[47][51] High-profile cases involving DSA members, like the 2016 FTC settlement with Herbalife—requiring a $200 million redress payment and operational restructuring to ensure at least one-third of sales occur outside the distributor network—further fuel arguments that DSA's ethical oversight fails to prevent systemic issues, as the company remained a member post-settlement.[52][53] Legal analyses in peer-reviewed journals describe DSA's role as enabling a neoliberal framework where MLM failures are externalized onto vulnerable recruits, particularly women and minorities targeted via social networks, without adequate regulatory pushback.[54][50] Despite DSA's assertions of distinguishing legitimate direct selling from fraud—through policies like prohibiting inventory loading and mandating buy-back options—critics maintain that these measures are voluntary and inconsistently enforced, allowing member companies to sustain criticism-plagued operations under the association's umbrella.[55] Empirical reviews of MLM viability, contrasting it with traditional small businesses where lifetime profitability exceeds 30%, reinforce claims that DSA-backed models systematically underperform due to saturated markets and recruitment saturation.[56] This has prompted calls for MLM-specific federal legislation to override industry lobbying, as state-level efforts often falter against DSA influence.[50]Distinctions from Pyramid Schemes and Legal Defenses
The Direct Selling Association (DSA) maintains that legitimate direct selling differs fundamentally from pyramid schemes in that compensation is derived primarily from the retail sale of tangible products to end consumers, rather than from recruiting new participants into the program.[55] Pyramid schemes, by contrast, generate revenue almost exclusively through enrollment fees or purchases required for participation, with little emphasis on genuine product movement to non-participants, rendering them unsustainable and illegal under U.S. federal law.[57] The DSA's Code of Ethics explicitly prohibits member companies from operating as pyramid schemes, requiring adherence to principles such as inventory repurchase guarantees—where companies must buy back unused, resalable inventory from independent sellers at a minimum of 90% of the net cost—and bans on misrepresentations of earnings potential.[58][3] Federal Trade Commission (FTC) guidelines reinforce this distinction through the "primarily test," evaluating whether an multi-level marketing (MLM) structure—common in direct selling—focuses on product sales to customers outside the network or on internal recruitment and purchases.[59] In the 2014 FTC v. BurnLounge case, the commission successfully argued that a program constituted a pyramid scheme because participants earned mainly by promoting the opportunity itself, not by retailing products, leading to a $44.5 million judgment.[59] Conversely, legitimate direct selling avoids this by emphasizing verifiable retail sales data and providing training on consumer-focused selling, as outlined in DSA advocacy for model legislation that criminalizes compensation primarily tied to recruitment over sales.[60] Legal defenses for direct selling companies often hinge on evidentiary demonstrations of product value and sales volume. In the 1979 FTC v. Amway case, the company defended against pyramid allegations by implementing a "70% rule," mandating that distributors resell at least 70% of purchased goods before qualifying for further bonuses, which courts upheld as evidence of a bona fide retail focus.[61] More recently, in a 2023 federal court ruling involving Neora (formerly Nerium), the judge rejected the FTC's broader interpretation of pyramid operations, affirming the "primarily" test and dismissing claims where retail sales to external customers predominated, resulting in a victory for the direct selling model.[62] DSA members leverage such precedents alongside self-regulatory mechanisms, including independent arbitration for ethics violations, to differentiate their operations from fraudulent schemes and mitigate regulatory scrutiny.[27] These defenses underscore that while pyramid schemes collapse due to inevitable recruitment saturation without product demand, sustainable direct selling relies on ongoing consumer purchases driven by product utility.[55]Recent Developments
Growth Reports and Industry Trends
The Direct Selling Association (DSA), through its affiliated Direct Selling Education Foundation (DSEF), annually publishes the Growth & Outlook Study, providing empirical data on U.S. direct selling metrics including retail sales, participant numbers, and consumer engagement.[63] In the 2025 edition, covering 2024 data released on August 27, 2025, U.S. retail sales totaled $34.7 billion, reflecting a decline from $36.7 billion in 2023.[14] Engaged sellers numbered 5.4 million in 2024, down from 6.1 million the prior year, while customers reached 34.3 million compared to 37.7 million in 2023.| Year | U.S. Retail Sales ($ billions) | Engaged Sellers (millions) | Customers (millions) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 36.7 | 6.1 | 37.7 |
| 2024 | 34.7 | 5.4 | 34.3 |