American Health Journal on PBS features Laminine OMEGA+++!
This Friday, October 3rd, make sure to tune in to PBS SoCal as award-winning American Health Journal features Laminine OMEGA+++ in its segment on the importance of omegas in good circulatory heath. Click the link below to check your local listings so you can set your calendar and tune in.
Eric utilizes his passion for the network marketing industry as the Director of Business Development for LifePharm Global Network. Eric’s global knowledge and understanding of the industry, coupled with his “don’t sweat the small stuff” approach, allows him to successfully serve as the bridge between the LPGN home office and IBOs in the field. Since 1989, Eric has spent his professional career in the network marketing industry. He attended the University of California, Irvine and earned a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Social Science. He enjoys spending quality time with his wife of 20 years as well as playing tennis and golf with his two sons, Patrick and Derek.
Business Building Corner
Cultivating Relationships for Referrals
Happy customers drive referrals, and referrals are the lifeblood of any retail or network marketing business. Referrals are also the fastest way to grow a network marketing organization. So how can we obtain those treasured referrals?
“The success of Laminine for me has been the amazing health benefits that it has brought for everyone I have shared it with. I have shared Laminine with friends, family and colleagues, and so many people are gaining enormous benefit from it. I have always had a genuine desire to help people find respite from their suffering, and with Laminine, many have experienced profound regeneration and wholeness. Laminine has been and continues to be a gift to me in so many ways.”
Julie Way, Silver Director
Dietary fiber, also known as roughage or bulk, includes all parts of plant foods that your body can't digest or absorb. Unlike other food components, such as fats, proteins or carbohydrates — which your body breaks down and absorbs — fiber isn't digestible. Instead, it passes relatively intact through your stomach, small intestine, colon and out of your body.